
Redmi’s First Gaming Smartphone to Launch This Month, May Feature Dimensity 1200 Chipset
Xiaomi sub-brand Redmi has confirmed that its first gaming phone will be released by the end of this month.
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Xiaomi sub-brand Redmi has confirmed that its first gaming phone will be released by the end of this month.

Due to a lukewarm reception of the MEGA model and fewer orders for the L series than anticipated earlier this year, Li Auto was compelled to reduce its yearly sales forecast.

Xiaomi's CEO Lei Jun: the company has not given up on its self-developed Surge chipsets.

On Thursday June 7, U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross announced a new agreement with Chinese telecommunications company ZTE Corporation that will replace t...

According to Chinese media reports, the popular live-streaming platform Douyu TV, is rumored to go public in Hong Kong next month at a valuation of $700 million...

OnePlus co-founder Carl Pei on Jan. 27 announced the establishment of his London-based new consumer technology startup Nothing, which obtained $7 million in fresh capital last December.

China’s leading video-streaming platform Bilibili is facing a severe backlash on social media due to what critics claim is offensive video content involving child porn, incest, and voyeurism.

Automated driving technology company Pony.ai announced on Wednesday that it had delivered samples of the automated driving controller based on NVIDIA's DRIVE Hyperion computing architecture and DRIVE Orin SoC to customers.

Although Huawei and SMIC were included on the U.S. trade blacklist, they still obtained U.S. technology and goods export licenses worth billions of dollars from November last year to April this year.

On February 3rd, Xiaomi Group's stock price broke through HK$39 to reach a new high of HK$39.85, with a market value reaching HK$100 billion.

Regarding the recent media reports on ByteDance's $7 billion purchase of NVIDIA chips, Douyin Vice President responded that many aspects of the reports are inaccurate and the numbers are not correct.

News emerged on October 31 that a consortium headed by CITIC Group, one of China's largest conglomerates, was in discussion with Naspers, a major shareholder of Tencent, to acquire its shares in full. Naspers' subsidiary Prosus later responded, calling the report "speculative and untrue."