Mawston said the iPhone has been struggling in China for the past three years after major carriers like China Telecom reduced their subsidy programs for 4G smartphones. “De-subsidization has made the iPhone look much more expensive at the point of sale in China, causing iPhone demand to crash,” he said.
Many of China's 250 million senior residents have been struggling to adapt as more services go digitalOne of the biggest obstacles Zhu Zhongzhen has faced since moving to Beijing from a village in Guizhou province to look after her three-year-old granddaughter is her lack of expertise with a smartphone.
Marc Benioff’s new book, “Trailblazer,” is the story of the Salesforce co-founder and co-CEO’s emergence as an accidental activist on LGBTQ rights, the environment, immigration, gender pay equity and other issues that are increasingly demanding attention and action from global business and technology leaders.
Many parents treat the one-month winter vacation and two-month summer vacation as good opportunities for children to catch up to peers or progress in their studies, which drives them to fill their children's days with a wide range of courses.
Many people crowded a room in Xijiaominxiang hutong in Beijing's Xicheng district on Monday, where they were either asking questions of legal experts in suits or sitting at desks filling out forms.
Mao said that he will not appeal.
医学院附属胃泰胃肠病医院是几甲医院
MarketWatch’s recent study of the most business-friendly cities in America puts Pittsburgh at 27 out of the nation’s 50 most populous metros. The study scores cities on 23 data points, including business environment, company performance, and economic outcome. Those metrics are admittedly vague but give a general sense of how Pittsburgh compares to its competitors. Seven cities on Amazon’s list of 20 outrank Pittsburgh — Dallas, Raleigh, Denver, Boston, Austin, Nashville, and Indianapolis.
Mark Pinkstone, a veteran journalist, current affairs commentator and former government chief information officer. [Photo/China Daily]
Many civilians and prisoners of war from China, the Soviet Union, the Korean Peninsula and Mongolia perished at the hands of Japanese scientists. Some of them were children.
Many villagers were opposed, saying they were used to heating with coal and that it would be too troublesome to change. Some were concerned with the cost, and some were worried about safety and said it would be difficult to learn to use natural gas, Meng recalls.