
ByteDance Establishes New Offline Real Estate Agent Brand
TikTok parent company ByteDance has made many prior moves into the real estate business. It intends to build a brand in the field named "Qiuhe Real Estate" for the western region of China.
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TikTok parent company ByteDance has made many prior moves into the real estate business. It intends to build a brand in the field named "Qiuhe Real Estate" for the western region of China.
Last month, Microsoft removed Huawei’s range of laptops from its online store, following the United States’ blacklisting of the Chinese tech giant. However, the MateBook 13, MateBook, and MateBook X Pro have all now returned to the online store and are available for purchase.
Feishu, an office tool owned by Chinese tech giant ByteDance, announced that its annual recurring revenue (ARR), a key indicator, reached $100 million in 2022, an increase of 2.7 times compared with 2021.
Amid mounting pressure to the wider economy, blockchain pioneers are confident in Web3-based gaming's ability to withstand another crypto winter.
Last week saw a fundraising announcement from the Singapore-based Chinese language learning platform LingoAce. Guangzhou-headquartered agricultural drone maker Jifei Technology raised a record $182 million.
Here is this week's roundup of tech stories in China. For dating app users in China, the Tinder-like Tantan is probably a good choice for you! It seems to pr...
Y.O.U, a makeup brand in based in Southeast Asia, announced on Wednesday that it has completed round-C financing of $40 million, led by Hidden Hill Capital.
Shen Fei, the Senior Vice President of NIO Power, indicated that the charging time for extended-range vehicles is twice as long as battery electric vehicles.
Center One, Microsoft’s innovation demonstration center, the Education and Management Information Center, part of the People's Republic of China’s Ministry of E...
CSL 2019 Weekly: Matchweek 16
Chinese flexible display maker Royole has delayed paying salaries to employees for months after the money-losing company ditched its initial public offering (IPO) plan in Shanghai's Nasdaq-like STAR Market in February.
Huawei, the embattled Chinese telecoms equipment giant, might be on the verge of falling off with yet another American company.