5G BlackBerry Smartphones manufactured by a Foxconn Subsidiary will launch later this year in the U.S. aimed at the Enterprise Market +
The BlackBerry that once swept the business market, is back again, but with a twist. A new report published today in Taiwan claims that a U.S. startup by the name of OnwardMobility has obtained the authorization of the BlackBerry smartphone brand. They re partnering with a subsidiary of Foxconn Group s Fu Zhikang (FIH) to exclusively produce the 5G BlackBerry. The new smartphone is expected to be unveiled in Europe and America later this year.
It is worth mentioning that OnwardMobility revealed that in addition to cooperating with Hon Hai Group for mass production of 5G BlackBerry, their long-term goal will be to manufacture the phones in the United States for the first time. However, without a supportive supply chain, it may be wishful thinking.
MOUNT PLEASANT â Questions continue to swirl as Foxconn remains nontransparent about what it is, and isnât, producing in Mount Pleasant.
Now, according to a statement made to The Journal Times, Foxconn Technology Group plans âto capture a substantial percentageâ of the U.S. server board market. A server board hosts some of the most important parts of any computing system, such as memory capacity and processor speed.
Although The Journal Times did ask, Foxconn Technology Group did not detail what âa substantial percentageâ means, what types of server boards are to be made, how many server boards are being made, how many workers are being employed in that effort and for whom they are being produced.
Geopolitical tensions between India and China are beginning to hurt some of Taiwan’s biggest technology companies, including suppliers to Apple Inc. and hindering New Delhi’s much-vaunted incentive program for electronics manufacturing.
Geopolitical tensions between India and China are beginning to hurt some of Taiwan’s biggest technology companies, including suppliers to Apple Inc, and hindering New Delhi’s much-vaunted incentive program for electronics manufacturing.
India has been slow to issue visas to Chinese engineers, who are needed to help Taiwanese companies set up factories in the South Asian nation, people with knowledge of the matter said on condition of anonymity.
India is also nudging companies to opt for employment permits, which are more difficult to obtain, they added.
The wrangling might delay Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s plan to bolster India’s manufacturing capacity and deter overseas