China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Taking a dip

- By MASI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

Xiaomi unveiled its first laptop on Wednesday in an effort to test the waters in the personal computer business as they struggle with sagging smartphone sales.

Xiaomi Corp unveiled its first laptop on Wednesday, in an effort to test the waters in the personal computer business as the Chinese smartphone vendor struggles with declining handset sales.

The Beijing-based company is sticking to the affordabil­ity strategy, which once helped it sell millions of smartphone­s.

But it remains to be seen how this will work in the PC sector, which has been dominated by players such as Lenovo Group Ltd and Apple Inc, experts said.

Mi Notebook Air, which retails from 3,499 yuan ($520), features a slim design and a body that the company claims is “thinner than a coin”.

Equipped with an independen­t graphic card, the computer is designed to offer a better game-playing and video-watching experience.

Lei Jun, founder and CEO of Xiaomi, said: “We are focusing on making good-quality devices that are affordable for average buyers.”

Although Xiaomi is a newcomer in the PC sector, the PC designers and developers it hires all have been working in the industry for more than 10 years, Lei said.

Xiaomi is part of a group of local firms that are expanding into the PC sector, as China’s handset market reaches saturation. Its arch rival Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd also launched its first PC product earlier this year.

Zhao Xiaolei, research manager at the China branch of research firm Internatio­nal Data Corp, said the main attraction of Xiaomi’s PCs remains its affordabil­ity.

“Technologi­cally speaking, there is not much innovation in Xiaomi’s newly released PCs. But an affordable price coupled with good performanc­e can help it appeal to college students and young people,” Zhao said.

To keep costs under control, Xiaomi chose a traditiona­l type of laptop with lower manufactur­ing costs, while Huawei opted for the new laptoptabl­et hybrid model, which is more expensive but remains popular despite the overall decline of the PC sector.

In the second quarter of 2016, the global personal computer market saw a year-onyear decline of 4.5 percent, according to IDC.

“But the PC market won’t decline forever. It is a mature market and there is always demand for quality PCs,” Zhao said.

Xiaomi also released a new middle-end smartphone called Redmi Pro on Wednesday. It comes with dual rear cameras and an OLED display, which can deliver better imaging effects.

price of Mi Notebook Air, first laptop made by Xiaomi Corp

 ?? FENG YONGBIN / CHINA DAILY ?? Lei Jun, CEO of Xiaomi Corp, tries Redmi Pro, a new Xiaomi handset released on Wednesday in Beijing, while actress Liu Shishi looks on.
FENG YONGBIN / CHINA DAILY Lei Jun, CEO of Xiaomi Corp, tries Redmi Pro, a new Xiaomi handset released on Wednesday in Beijing, while actress Liu Shishi looks on.

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