The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Under fire Huawei and foldable screens in focus at top mobile fair

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BARCELONA: Phone makers will focus on foldable screens and the introducti­on of blazing fast 5G wireless networks at the world’s biggest mobile fair starting Monday in Spain as they try to reverse a decline in sales of smartphone­s.

Huawei will also be in the spotlight at the four-day Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona as the Chinese telecom giant fights US efforts to persuade its allies not to use the company’s technology to build their 5G networks due to concerns that its gear could facilitate Chinese spying.

The firm is the leading manufactur­er of equipment for the fifth-generation cellular networks which operators are starting to install. The technology – known as 5G – will bring near-instantane­ous connectivi­ty for smartphone­s and devices from automobile­s to robots.

“This year we are going to see real 5G ready launches happening in different countries and the focus will be on where, when, how and what are the consumer benefits going to be of 5G in 2019,” said Ian Fogg, a mobile industry analyst at OpenSignal, which collects and analyses data from mobile networks.

Huawei and other firms are scheduled to carry out 5G smartphone demos at the fair even though the next generation wireless network will not be widely available for several more years.

Samsung, the world’s biggest seller of smartphone­s, unveiled a handset that folds open to be a tablet on Wednesday in San Francisco, becoming the first major manufactur­er to offer the long-awaited feature.

China’s Xiaomi and several other firms are expected to follow Samsung’s lead and present foldable devices of their own in Barcelona although it was not clear if they would be prototypes or commercial­ly available devices such as Samsung’s. Foldable phones come as handset makers are scrambling to introduce new features to attract customers.

Global smartphone sales fell 4.1 per cent in 2018 to a total of 1.4 billion units due to an economic slowdown in China, which consumes about one-third of the world’s phones, and a lack of major innovation­s that encourage people to upgrade their devices, according to research firm IDC.

Sales fell by 0.5 per cent in 2017 for a first annual decline.

“People have been holding on to their phones longer. A lot of it is consumer frustratio­n that devices aren’t changing a tonne and prices keep going up,” said senior IDC research analyst Ryan Reith.

Apple as usual will not be present at the show and Huawei this year will present its new flagship at an event in Paris in March instead of at the fair.

With the three biggest smartphone makers not unveiling new devices in Barcelona, the rest of the industry will have a rare opportunit­y to grab the spotlight at the fair.

Huawei received a boost in its battle to ease concerns over its technology in the lead up to the congress after the Financial Times reported on Monday that British intelligen­ce has concluded security risks posed by using equipment made by the firm can be managed.

And mobile communicat­ions industry body GSMA, which organises the fair, urged European government­s not to ban Huawei from helping to build their 5G networks.

Australia, New Zealand and Japan have followed Washington’s call for a Huawei ban, but the picture in Europe is more nuanced, not least because Huawei’s 5G capabiliti­es are ahead of those of its rivals, analysts say.

Major countries such as Germany fear banning the Chinese firm would cause a considerab­le setback in Europe’s efforts to deploy 5G and stay competitiv­e in communicat­ions. —AFP

 ??  ?? The logo of Huawei Technologi­es in front of the German headquarte­rs of the Chinese telecommun­ications group in Duesseldor­f, Germany. — Reuters photo
The logo of Huawei Technologi­es in front of the German headquarte­rs of the Chinese telecommun­ications group in Duesseldor­f, Germany. — Reuters photo

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