Bagaman ang Da Xinjiang Technology, ang overlord ng drone ng China, ay isa sa mga pinakamatagumpay na kumpanya na nagpapatakbo sa Estados Unidos sa nakaraang dekada, nagpupumiglas ito sa merkado na dating pinangungunahan nito.
यद्यपि चीन का ड्रोन अधिपति Dajiang Technology पिछले एक दशक में संयुक्त राज्य अमेरिका में संचालित सबसे सफल कंपनियों में से एक है, लेकिन यह उस बाजार में संघर्ष कर रहा है जिस पर यह एक बार हावी था।
Pandaily has been following China’s most influential Chinese tech companies throughout 2019. Now we have compiled a list of our favorite gadgets from 2019.
XAG, a Chinese drone manufacturer based in Guangzhou, teamed up with German company Bayer Crop Science to deploy a drone attack to kill the fall armyworms infesting crops in China’s Guangxi province.
DJI, the global leader in drone technology, announced the release of its DJI Government Edition which is complete with the most secure and stringent security measures to protect drone data.
Chinese tech company DJI, known for their aerial photography and videography, has put drones aside to introduce its first-ever robot built explicitly for education—the RoboMaster S1.
Following the release of a Reuters article on Sequoia Capital China's 20 percent cut of investment staff, Sequoia China has dismissed the report firmly, claiming that the published article is “nonsense” and a malicious attempt for defamation.
Ying-Ying Lu and Rui Ma talk about the dirty, risky, and more unseemly aspects of China tech, primarily focused on two stories that grabbed headlines recently: the “hack” at Pinduoduo, and the corruption scandal at DJI.
2018 has been a turbulent year for tech companies across China. The trade war tension between the US and China has been unsettling for their businesses and long time American trade partners.
Tighten your purse strings, otherwise Osmo Pocket, the smallest handheld stabilized camera released by Chinese drone company DJI on Nov.29, will take $349 right out of your pocket.
Recently on Chinese social media, people from all walks of life posted pictures of themselves “accidentally falling down” next to their most valuable possessions as to show off their wealth. What people chose to flaunt are far beyond your imagination.
Autel Robotics, a U.S. subsidiary of Chinese technology company Autel Intelligent Technology Corp, filed a patent infringement suit against the Shenzhen-based drone company DJI Technology Co. to the US International Trade Commission (ITC) on Aug. 30.