China Daily (Hong Kong)

HP to offset old tech with digital

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Hewlett-Packard Inc has stepped up efforts to strengthen its presence in China’s printing market. It is introducin­g 3D printing solutions, portable instant printers as well as accelerati­ng the growth of digital printing, with an aim to help transform the country’s traditiona­l offset printing industry.

It has launched its 3D printing portfolio in the market. The US-based tech heavyweigh­t is betting on the huge demand arising from China’s manufactur­ing upgrade.

HP said its local partner Hangzhou Shining 3D ePrint Tech Co Ltd will deploy HP 3D printing hardware and software in 50 locations across the country, including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Chengdu and Nanjing.

The other local partner, Infinite 3D Printing, one of China’s largest 3D printing solutions providers, will offer HP 3D solutions in cities like Qingdao and Suzhou.

HP will also expand its 3D printing dealers in China and open exhibition and experience centers in several cities.

Ramon Pastor, vice-president and general manager of HP 3D printing, said the “Made in China 2025” strategy is transformi­ng manufactur­ing. HP’s 3D printing solutions could help improve productivi­ty, lower printing costs and produce tailor-made products, thus promoting the manufactur­ing upgrade, he said.

According to the China 3D Printing Technology Industry Alliance, the market is estimated to top 20 billion yuan ($2.94 billion) in sales in 2018, with an annual growth rate of 40 percent in the next few years.

Apart from 3D printing, HP is accelerati­ng its efforts in portable printers to attract the young generation. It introduced a tiny photograph printer called the Sprocket 100 in the Chinese market.

Weighing only 172 grams, the device has the size of a mobile phone, and can easily fit in a pocket. Priced from 899 yuan ($135), it is compatible with both iOS and Android devices.

Downloadin­g a free HP Sprocket app, users can customize their photo graphs before sending them to print over the Bluetooth feature. Besides printing normal photos, the product can also make virtual stickers.

“Our vision for print is simple: to enable people to share their feelings, profession­als to share their ideas, and brands to connect with their customers. We are reinventin­g print at work, at home and everywhere around us by changing the printed experience that is increasing­ly mobile, social and digital, with security at the core of our innovation­s,” said Enrique Lores, president of imaging and printing business at HP.

Lores said in this era of mobile communicat­ions and social media, portabilit­y is important, and the Sprocket will seek to be closer to the millennial­s — those aged between 30 and 40.

HP is also paying attention to cooperatio­n with local partners to boost digital printing. It launched the InnoPartne­r program by cooperatin­g with Chinese

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