Updates:
Dear Friends, Google has removed “Remove China Apps” from google play store.
Thank you all for your support in past 2 weeks. “You Are Awesome”
TIP: Its easy to find the origin of any app by searching on google by typing origin country
Stay Tuned !! Stay Safe!!
According to Counterpoint Research, a global industry analysis firm, “the market share of Chinese brands in the Indian smartphone market reached a record 66 per cent during the first quarter of 2019”.
Chinese phone brands Xiaomi, Vivo and Oppo are household Indian names.
However, Xiaomi, one of the leading Chinese phone companies, has announced that it is making some of its models in India.
What’s Chinese, what’s not? Is boycott pragmatic? Given China’s massive investments in India, identifying what’s Chinese and what’s not and finding a competitive alternative appear to be a tough job as the chorus for boycotting Chinese products grows. As the rhetoric in India grows over Chinese products in the light of the Ladakh tensions, the realities on the ground show the business relationship between Asia’s two economic giants is too big — and too complex — for any blanket boycott. Given China’s massive investments in India, identifying what’s Chinese and what’s not and finding a competitive alternative appear to be… Read more »
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/06/03/tech/india-remove-china-app-intl-hnk/index.html
https://onetouchapplabs.com/
Updates:
Dear Friends, Google has removed “Remove China Apps” from google play store.
Thank you all for your support in past 2 weeks. “You Are Awesome”
TIP: Its easy to find the origin of any app by searching on google by typing origin country
Stay Tuned !! Stay Safe!!
According to Counterpoint Research, a global industry analysis firm, “the market share of Chinese brands in the Indian smartphone market reached a record 66 per cent during the first quarter of 2019”.
Chinese phone brands Xiaomi, Vivo and Oppo are household Indian names.
However, Xiaomi, one of the leading Chinese phone companies, has announced that it is making some of its models in India.
What’s Chinese, what’s not? Is boycott pragmatic? Given China’s massive investments in India, identifying what’s Chinese and what’s not and finding a competitive alternative appear to be a tough job as the chorus for boycotting Chinese products grows. As the rhetoric in India grows over Chinese products in the light of the Ladakh tensions, the realities on the ground show the business relationship between Asia’s two economic giants is too big — and too complex — for any blanket boycott. Given China’s massive investments in India, identifying what’s Chinese and what’s not and finding a competitive alternative appear to be… Read more »