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Vietnamese smartphone maker, Bkav targets US & Asia Market to be the next Apple

Chinese don't make anything high tech. You're so silly:omghaha:
That BPhone looks better than the Hauwei honor crap. :omghaha:

They are starting to make high tech products, though the majority of their high tech exports is still dominated by foreign/western/japanese/korean/taiwanese companies with factories in china.
Im just surprised to see chinese on here making fun of vietnam. I thought china will be the last country to make fun of vietnam, since just couple decades ago it wasnt much different from vietnam.lol So they shouldnt dismissed vietnsm so easilly, after all, just 2-3 decades ago many westerners/people here called china the sick man of Asia, and nobody believed it could have achieved what it has achieved today, even though it still has a long way to go to reach westsrn/japanese standards. So chinese members here shouldnt dismiss vietnam just yet, they should know better from their own experience. You always have to start from somewhere.
 
Next Apple come from Vietnam ... how much is the BPhone now ? and Configuration ?

I've got the specs and the prices for the different version for you in this blog entry:

Bphone by BKAV – Is the Vietnamese Smartphone Better than iPhone?

The new BKAV Bphone has been creating a lot of buzz lately, at least in Vietnam. This is not the first Vietnamese smartphone (we’ve already had some from Mobiistar, Rovi and VNPT) but consumers are expecting a lot from this phone because none of previous products are successful in the market.


Unlike other manufacturers that are targeting the low or mid-range market, Bphone was claimed to be a high-end smartphone. Nguyen Tu Quang, BKAV’s CEO, even said the phone has a better design than iPhone 6 and delivers better sound quality than the Sony Xperia Z3. Many people have been doubtful because Quang was well-known for expressing excessive confidence about BKAV’s products.



The BKAV Bphone has just been officially introduced on May 26, 2015 at National Convention Center in Hanoi, Vietnam. Let’s see if it can compete in the high-end market that is dominated by iPhones. Can this be a historic milestone for the electronics industry in Vietnam?



Design

The Bphone is said to be the first smartphone in the world featuring flat design. I’m quite impressed with the sleek design. It has a 5-inch display only, so you can see it is smaller than recent flagships like iPhone 6 Plus or Samsung Galaxy S6.


You might find it familiar because it looks like a hybrid of iPhone and Sony Xperia in my opinion. It also reminds me of some Oppo products.


bphone-4.jpg

bphone-5.jpg

bphone-1.jpg


iPhone 6 Plus, Bphone and Samsung Galaxy S6

Features and Tech Specs

bphone-2.jpg



Bphone vs iPhone 6 Plus Specs. Image credit: VNExpress

  • OS: BOS (forked Android 5.0 Lollipop)
  • Network: HSDPA 21.6 Mbps
  • Display: 5-inch Sharp LCD TFT, full-HD resolution (1920 x 1080 pixels), 441 ppi
  • Gorilla Glass 3 on front and back
  • Rear camera: 13MP OmniVision sensor, Ubi Focus, Sapphire lens cover, supports recording 4K, 1080p@60fps/30fps, 720p@120fps videos
  • Front Camera: 5MP, wide 88-degree angle
  • Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 Quad Core 2.5GHz
  • RAM: 3GB
  • Internal Memory: 16GB / 64GB / 128GB
  • External memory card: not supported
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac, 2 bands, Wi-Fi Direct, GPS, Glonass, TransferJet (500 times faster than NFC), microUSB
  • Audio: Supports hi-res FLAC, ALAC, 24-bit/192kHz
  • Microphone:noise-canceling FluenceHD
  • Battery: Li-Po 3.000 mAh supporting Quick Charge 2.0 Plus
  • 5GB of storage on Bdrive
  • Secured with built-in Firewall and BKAV Security
  • Size: 14,1 x 6,9 x 7.5 mm
  • Colors: black, white, champagne gold, 24K gold
  • Price: 9,990,000 VND (460 USD) for Black – 16GB edition, 12,960,000 VND (593 USD) for Black, White, Champagne Gold – 64GB edition, and 20,200,000 VND (925 USD) for 24K Gold – 128GB edition

I will post a review as soon as I have a chance to test the Bphone. What do you think about the made-in-Vietnam smartphone, does it have any chance to compete with Apple or Samsung?


Bphone by BKAV – Is the Vietnamese Smartphone Better than iPhone? - All about Bphone BKAV Vietnam
 
I've got the specs and the prices for the different version for you in this blog entry:

Bphone by BKAV – Is the Vietnamese Smartphone Better than iPhone?

The new BKAV Bphone has been creating a lot of buzz lately, at least in Vietnam. This is not the first Vietnamese smartphone (we’ve already had some from Mobiistar, Rovi and VNPT) but consumers are expecting a lot from this phone because none of previous products are successful in the market.



Unlike other manufacturers that are targeting the low or mid-range market, Bphone was claimed to be a high-end smartphone. Nguyen Tu Quang, BKAV’s CEO, even said the phone has a better design than iPhone 6 and delivers better sound quality than the Sony Xperia Z3. Many people have been doubtful because Quang was well-known for expressing excessive confidence about BKAV’s products.


The BKAV Bphone has just been officially introduced on May 26, 2015 at National Convention Center in Hanoi, Vietnam. Let’s see if it can compete in the high-end market that is dominated by iPhones. Can this be a historic milestone for the electronics industry in Vietnam?



Design

The Bphone is said to be the first smartphone in the world featuring flat design. I’m quite impressed with the sleek design. It has a 5-inch display only, so you can see it is smaller than recent flagships like iPhone 6 Plus or Samsung Galaxy S6.


You might find it familiar because it looks like a hybrid of iPhone and Sony Xperia in my opinion. It also reminds me of some Oppo products.

View attachment 243113

View attachment 243114
View attachment 243112

iPhone 6 Plus, Bphone and Samsung Galaxy S6


Features and Tech Specs

View attachment 243115


Bphone vs iPhone 6 Plus Specs. Image credit: VNExpress





    • OS: BOS (forked Android 5.0 Lollipop)
    • Network: HSDPA 21.6 Mbps
    • Display: 5-inch Sharp LCD TFT, full-HD resolution (1920 x 1080 pixels), 441 ppi
    • Gorilla Glass 3 on front and back
    • Rear camera: 13MP OmniVision sensor, Ubi Focus, Sapphire lens cover, supports recording 4K, 1080p@60fps/30fps, 720p@120fps videos
    • Front Camera: 5MP, wide 88-degree angle
    • Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 Quad Core 2.5GHz
    • RAM: 3GB
    • Internal Memory: 16GB / 64GB / 128GB
    • External memory card: not supported
    • Connectivity: Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac, 2 bands, Wi-Fi Direct, GPS, Glonass, TransferJet (500 times faster than NFC), microUSB
    • Audio: Supports hi-res FLAC, ALAC, 24-bit/192kHz
    • Microphone:noise-canceling FluenceHD
    • Battery: Li-Po 3.000 mAh supporting Quick Charge 2.0 Plus
    • 5GB of storage on Bdrive
    • Secured with built-in Firewall and BKAV Security
    • Size: 14,1 x 6,9 x 7.5 mm
    • Colors: black, white, champagne gold, 24K gold
    • Price: 9,990,000 VND (460 USD) for Black – 16GB edition, 12,960,000 VND (593 USD) for Black, White, Champagne Gold – 64GB edition, and 20,200,000 VND (925 USD) for 24K Gold – 128GB edition

I will post a review as soon as I have a chance to test the Bphone. What do you think about the made-in-Vietnam smartphone, does it have any chance to compete with Apple or Samsung?

Bphone by BKAV – Is the Vietnamese Smartphone Better than iPhone? - All about Bphone BKAV Vietnam
Parameter seems not bad, just over 2,500RMB price expensive for such config, at least not cheap in China market ... I just don't know how many Vietnamese can afford the 2,500~3,000 RMB BPhone in Vietnam ??? In China i also feel higher price than BPhone's config, here the same config Android smartphones selling 1,000 ~ 2,000 RMB by HuaWei, XiaoMi, Lenovo, Vivo, CoolPad, Oppo etc.

My opinion is, BPhone won't be as same as Apple Iphone, only their price can sell as high as Iphone. :D

As an Engineer, my suggestion is if BPhone still choose " 5-inch Sharp LCD TFT, full-HD resolution (1920 x 1080 pixels), 441 ppi" ... Sharp TFT-LCD expensive, can't cost down.
Price: 9,990,000 VND (460 USD) for Black – 16GB edition, 12,960,000 VND (593 USD) for Black, White, Champagne Gold – 64GB edition, and 20,200,000 VND (925 USD) for 24K Gold – 128GB edition
 
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They are starting to make high tech products, though the majority of their high tech exports is still dominated by foreign/western/japanese/korean/taiwanese companies with factories in china.
Im just surprised to see chinese on here making fun of vietnam. I thought china will be the last country to make fun of vietnam, since just couple decades ago it wasnt much different from vietnam.lol So they shouldnt dismissed vietnsm so easilly, after all, just 2-3 decades ago many westerners/people here called china the sick man of Asia, and nobody believed it could have achieved what it has achieved today, even though it still has a long way to go to reach westsrn/japanese standards. So chinese members here shouldnt dismiss vietnam just yet, they should know better from their own experience. You always have to start from somewhere.

Vietnam is a small country with no resources with a small uneducated population. Small market means no influence. Cheap labour can be got from anywhere. Vietnam can easily be replaced by many African countries. Now robots are doing the work of humans. Those low end factories will be fully automated.

China can never be replaced due to its massive market.

If anyone thinks a joke like Vietnam can touch a giant like China is BEYOND delusional.

Even a fully developed superpower like the US is losing out to a still developing China.

China at half its full potential will easily become the most powerful country on planet earth.

There are provinces in China that dwarf the entire Vietnamese economy.
 
They are starting to make high tech products, though the majority of their high tech exports is still dominated by foreign/western/japanese/korean/taiwanese companies with factories in china.
Im just surprised to see chinese on here making fun of vietnam. I thought china will be the last country to make fun of vietnam, since just couple decades ago it wasnt much different from vietnam.lol So they shouldnt dismissed vietnsm so easilly, after all, just 2-3 decades ago many westerners/people here called china the sick man of Asia, and nobody believed it could have achieved what it has achieved today, even though it still has a long way to go to reach westsrn/japanese standards. So chinese members here shouldnt dismiss vietnam just yet, they should know better from their own experience. You always have to start from somewhere.
Nope, 2-3 decades later maybe Vietnam can make fun of Japan and your most European countries. And if war happened, there would be another different case.
 
They are starting to make high tech products, though the majority of their high tech exports is still dominated by foreign/western/japanese/korean/taiwanese companies with factories in china.
Im just surprised to see chinese on here making fun of vietnam. I thought china will be the last country to make fun of vietnam, since just couple decades ago it wasnt much different from vietnam.lol So they shouldnt dismissed vietnsm so easilly, after all, just 2-3 decades ago many westerners/people here called china the sick man of Asia, and nobody believed it could have achieved what it has achieved today, even though it still has a long way to go to reach westsrn/japanese standards. So chinese members here shouldnt dismiss vietnam just yet, they should know better from their own experience. You always have to start from somewhere.

today is the 29th year of Vietnamese economic reforms. not a single multinational company from Vietnam has any influence on global markets, patents or science. Vietnam has no globally known universities and their scientific publication count is the same as Kenya and below Nigeria.

the 29th year of Chinese economic reforms was 2007. already 3rd largest scientific publisher, already had multiple competitive multinationals, etc.
 
I'd laugh too, since all you posted was a software outsourcing company utilizing cloud services, not a company involved in setting up the network hardware which enabled the cloud in the first place.

Under a subsidiary name, FTG produces and distribute network & teleco equipment where as FPT with technical expertise sets up the network equipment.

The FPT Trading Group (FTG), is the number one distributor of information technology and telecommunication products in Vietnam. The company manufactures "Made-in-Vietnam" technology products.

Partner with more than 60 prestigious global vendors including IBM, Lenovo, Microsoft, HP, Nokia, Toshiba, Oracle, Samsung, Cisco, Dell, Motorola, Apple, Intel, Vertu, Symantec, Nec, Seagate, Logitech, Foxconn, MSI, and Sandisk.

today is the 29th year of Vietnamese economic reforms. not a single multinational company from Vietnam has any influence on global markets, patents or science. Vietnam has no globally known universities and their scientific publication count is the same as Kenya and below Nigeria.

the 29th year of Chinese economic reforms was 2007. already 3rd largest scientific publisher, already had multiple competitive multinationals, etc.


China reform more than a decade earlier than Vietnam. Having the best university doesn't mean a country can produce innovative products nor does it measures a person IQ level. Vietnam PISA results and global rankings in math and science competition is at the top. The potential of this country is high and your comparing it to African countries :lol:

China IT business is much more develop but their name brands have yet to dominate every country in the global market. Whereas Vietnam is starting out from the bottom and already has a name brand recognized in the world which beat even Toyota and Intel. Give it a decade or so and you will see more name brands from this small, poor African like country.:lol:





'Flappy Bird' Is World's 39th Most Popular Brand; Google Continues To Hold The Top Spot

2D11515823-today-tamron-flappy-bird-140205-02.jpg

Viet Nam’s Flappy Bird mobile game has been ranked 39th in a report on the world’s 50 most popular brands of 2014.

The report was released by Infegy, an American provider of intelligent social media monitoring, which is also an analytics platform.

The game, developed by Vietnamese Nguyen Ha Dong, became a phenomenon at the beginning of 2014 and was the most downloaded application on the Google Play Store and App Store for Android and iOS devices.

The report is based on data collected by Infegy through its product ‘Infegy Atlas’, a social media intelligence platform that enables brands, researchers, and agencies to understand consumers better and faster through advanced analysis of social data. It analysed more than 800 brands and drew from insights from billions of online conversations in 2014 and from Infegy Atlas’ analysis.

Flappy Bird is the only game on the list, although other games, such as Clash of Clans, were also tracked. The most popular topics for conversation included Flappy Bird clones, the Flappy Bird creator and App Store.

The game caught users’ attention the most in February with 8.36 million posts, followed by January with 5.93 million posts. Out of these posts, 56 per cent were positive, 37 per cent were negative and 6 per cent were mixed. Its purchase intent was 7 per cent.

Besides the game, NBC International, Toyota, Intel and Fox also figured on the list for the first time at positions 42nd, 44th, 45th and 48th respectively.

Google topped the list for the second year in a row, although total posts fell by 30 per cent compared with that last year. Twitter maintained its second position and also saw a decline in the number of total posts. Meanwhile, Facebook and Apple climbed to the third and fourth spot, respectively.

At the No 6 spot was Disney, which garnered the highest positive brand sentiment at 86 per cent, while at No 31 was CNN, which evoked the most negative sentiments at 53 per cent.

Flappy Bird among world's 50 most popular brands



Why Flappy Bird was just the start for Vietnam's startup scene

dated: July 27, 2015 6:55 AM P

HANOI and HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam, and SAN FRANCISCO -- It was just supposed to be a casual cocktail meetup.

Before embarking on a 19-hour trip to Vietnam, I headed over to the Vietnamese General Consulate, a mere 15-minute cab ride away from the CNET offices in San Francisco. I imagined it as a fun way to ease into my assignment -- a few good drinks and conversation with folks who knew a thing or two about the country I was about to visit.

Instead I arrived at what appeared to be a formal business meeting between two-dozen or so black-suited Vietnamese ministry officials, Vietnamese startup types and Silicon Valley angel investors. My only drink: A mini bottle of water.

At first, I wasn't sure what I had wandered into. But it quickly became clear that I had been invited to observe a brainstorming session for Vietnamese officials to grill American angel investors on how the whole startup world works in the US. Their ultimate goal is to replicate what Silicon Valley has done very well: Building the next Facebook or Dropbox.

"I would like to bring the culture from Silicon Valley into Vietnam," said Thach Le Anh, the US-educated businesswoman who serves as head of Vietnam Silicon Valley, or VSV, a government-sponsored group that funds and mentors startups. "We want to bring the very different culture, very independent thinking and dreaming" to Vietnam.

vietnam-electronics-stores-apple-06626.jpg

Vietnam, which has a booming tech sector in places like Hanoi (pictured here), is trying to grow its startup industry.Shara Tibken/CNET

VSV is part of a broader push by the country to transform itself into a more technically savvy hub of innovation. The country is already home to a number of the world's largest consumer-electronics companies, which have brought manufacturing jobs and investment in resources. But Vietnam wants more: It's not enough that its citizens build televisions and smartphones; the country wants to foster the creation of billion-dollar startups that can change the world, while at the same time boosting the national economy.

"We're beginning the project to try to encourage investors to invest in startups and the entrepreneurship space in Vietnam," Tran Van Tung, Vietnam's deputy minister of science and technology, said through an interpreter. "We'd like to develop an ecosystem where it would be really rewarding for investors and angels, as well as contribute investments into the country."

Vietnam might succeed, if it can get out of its own way. Strict and often confusing regulations limit homegrown companies, while corruption -- such as extorting companies for money -- remains a reality. Venture capitalists are rare, as Vietnamese investors would rather plow their savings into real estate instead of startups. And there's not a good ecosystem for funding and expanding companies. Because of all this, few Vietnamese companies have been able to move outside Southeast Asia and become household names.

That doesn't mean Vietnam isn't trying.

Not just another cog in the wheel

Over the past decade, Vietnam has expanded beyond its traditional textiles and coffee businesses to become a big player in the electronics manufacturing supply chain. Many of the world's smartphones are now assembled in the country, and giants such as Samsung have been growing their operations in Vietnam. The country, still run by a conservative Communist government, is now trying to figure out how to move beyond being just another cog in the manufacturing wheel.

Enter VSV, an ambitious initiative backed by the Vietnamese government since mid-2013. It gives entrepreneurs funding to get their ideas off the ground, helps them make business plans and connects startups with potential customers and investors. VSV operates an accelerator that spawned nine consumer and business-centric startups in its first session last summer. Other batches will emerge this year.

To learn from the US, VSV sent 12 delegates from Vietnam -- including the deputy minister of science and technology -- on a weeklong "study tour" of the San Francisco Bay Area and New York. That included talking with investors, big corporations and startups about how to drum up interest in Vietnamese companies -- and what role the government should play in helping and funding them. The trip was a sort of scouting visit for another tour, a group that would include the head of Vietnam's ministry of science and technology.

After the nearly two-hour meeting in San Francisco ended, I caught up with Pham Hong Quat, director general of the National Agency for Technology Entrepreneurship and Commercialization, a branch of the Vietnam Ministry of Science and Technology. Why, I asked, is the government supporting startups? Isn't that basically the opposite of what the Vietnamese government has stood for?

He barely reacts to my questions -- he's clearly been asked this many times before.

"The young generation now in Vietnam, they have big dreams and ambitions to be successful entrepreneurs, to get money from technology," Quat said. "It's different from the traditional way to be an employee for a big company. So I would like to support them."

It's that last thought that sticks with me as I finally make my way to Vietnam. "Everyone in Vietnam is an entrepreneur," more than one person told me during my stay there. EvenTed Osius, the US ambassador to Vietnam, has pointed out the country's entrepreneurial spirit and its "dynamism." I don't have to look farther than the street food stands crowding every block in Hanoi or the dozens of tailor shops in Hoi An in central Vietnam to understand.
img8312.jpg

Thach Le Anh, head of Vietnam Silicon Valley, at the Vietnam Consulate in San Francisco, gives an overview of the group's efforts to boost startups in Vietnam.Shara Tibken/CNET

Over the past couple of years, a new wave of startups and entrepreneurs have emerged in Vietnam. Call it the "Flappy Bird Effect," named for the mobile game that went viral last year before its Hanoi-based creator, Nguyen Ha Dong, pulled it from Apple's App Store for being "too addictive." At the game's peak, Dong was making about $50,000 a day in advertising -- the amount a typical Vietnamese worker earns over nearly three decades.

"No moment in Vietnam's startup history for the last 10 years could be so monumental and magical" as the Flappy Bird success, wrote Anh-Minh Do, an editor of the Tech In Asia blog, a news site and one of the few English-language sites tracking Vietnamese startups.

Entrepreneurs I met in Vietnam either admired Dong's success or derided his app for being mediocre and "something anyone can do," as one would-be app developer put it. But they couldn't avoid talking about it. Flappy Bird stands as the shining example of a Vietnamese product that went global and did so very quickly.

An overnight success like Flappy Bird is the exception to the rule. Even if other Vietnamese companies make it to US shores, it likely won't happen soon.

"Vietnam takes time," said Pham Hop Pho, vice president of IDG Ventures Vietnam, the first venture capital firm in Vietnam. "It's a get-rich-slowly country."

The funding gap

The startup world in the US is a complex web of venture capital firms, angel investors, crowdfunding and entrepreneurs working together (or against each other) to ensure up-and-coming businesses get the proper funding. Vietnam's funding realm can't compare.

When IDG Ventures Vietnam opened its shop with a $100 million fund in 2004, it found a populace that was unaware of the concept of a venture fund. "We translated the words 'venture capital' into Vietnamese," University of Southern California-educated Pho said. "There was no word for 'VC.' A lot of people thought we were selling insurance because the word sounds similar."

The VC firms in Vietnam today largely focus on funding startups early. But that presents a challenge for companies when they get bigger and need to raise more money. They don't have a lot of options like in developed nations.

Part of the problem with securing funding in Vietnam is it's hard to have a successful "exit." Until going public or being acquired becomes common in Vietnam, investors don't know when, or even if, they'll get a return on their investment.

"How do we get our money out?" Pho said. "That part needs to be a lot clearer than it is now."

Tapping into the US investor scene isn't easy for companies without connections there. "If I were to invest in a Vietnam company today, I would not know where to start," Etienne Deffarges, president of the Harvard Business School Alumni Angels Association, said during the VSV event in San Francisco. "I've been to the country, but I don't know anything about startups in Vietnam."

Raising Vietnam's profile

Making US investors aware of Vietnam was a big reason for VSV's visit. It certifies companies that have been through its accelerator in hopes investors will be more comfortable with giving them money -- giving them a sort of Vietnam seal of approval.

"It's really difficult to find an investor and to convince them to believe in our vision and to put some investment in our project," said Sarrie Bui, who will be taking part in VSV's upcoming accelerator program, both for the funding but also for the mentorship offered by VSV. When she applied for the VSV accelerator early this year, all she had was an idea for an Etsy-like e-commerce site that would connect makers and artists in Southeast Asia with buyers all over the globe. But VSV will help her launch her site, TheHandmark.com.
vietnam-jabil-factory-00694.jpg

Vietnam's booming manufacturing sector (pictures)

"E-commerce is now one of the things the government pays attention to," she said. VSV will help "in terms of knowledge, how to make it really happen."

Whether US investors are comforted or concerned by the Vietnam government's involvement is a whole other question. Most foreign investments in startups in Vietnam today are coming from other Asian countries, like Japan.

When it comes to government involvement in startups, there are two primary models to consider -- the US version where the government is mostly hands-off, or the Chinese model where the government directly supports startups. Earlier this year, China set up a $6.5 billion government venture capital fund to "support fledging startups in emerging industries." Other countries that have given government support to tech companies include Israel, Japan and South Korea -- all places where tech is booming.

Vietnam reportedly may set up a VC fund of its own by the end of the year, and VSV gives out seed funding of at least $10,000 to each of its accelerator participants. The government also sponsors university incubators, workshops and startup competitions. But right now the overall government is following a sort of hybrid model -- not fully supportive like China but not fully hands-off like the US, either.

Government involvement is something some local entrepreneurs see as essential. Before participating in the VSV accelerator, Nguyen Ngoc Tuan tried to find other investors for his site that helps companies recruit new hires "but failed because they required a business plan, financial plan, valuing the company, and it was difficult for us to evaluate our company at that time," he said.

Sarrie Bui, head of TheHandmark.com (left), and Nguyen Ngoc Tuan, creator of the Jobwise.com employee recruitment site, talk about how the Vietnam government-backed Vietnam Silicon Valley has helped get their companies off the ground.Shara Tibken/CNET

Tuan ended up participating in the four-month-long accelerator bootcamp in Hanoi last summer, learning how to make a business plan and market his product, originally called Astro Telligent but rebrandedJobwise.com in time for its launch this month. VSV invested $13,000 for a 10 percent stake in his company (though Tuan had to pay $3,000 back to the group to cover the bootcamp cost), and it connected him with his first big customer -- Vietnam International Bank. It also helped Tuan raise $80,000 after the bootcamp at an $800,000 valuation.

"Vietnam Silicon Valley is very good for startups," he said.

For Vietnam to reach its goal of having 5,000 functioning tech companies by 2020, it has some work to do. Tech in Asia estimates the current number of startups is between 1,000 and 2,000, though it's difficult to gauge. "Assuming that Vietnam pumps millions more dollars into this sector, then the 5,000 number is achievable," said Do, an editor at the site. "If not, it's just a pipe dream."

Starting a sizable state-sponsored VC fund would be one way to get the market going. And making sure the Vietnamese government earmarks millions for startups was part of VSV's goal with its US tour. It hopes to raise $3 million to co-invest in its accelerator over the next five years, and it's pushing the government to support even more incubators and efforts to help startups.

TechElite, a three-year-old startup whose CEO graduated from Stanford in 2012, is one of the rare Vietnamese companies to have funding from two angel investors in Silicon Valley. But the Hanoi company, which initially created an Eventbrite-like event ticketing and management system, turned to VSV when it came time to raise more cash to develop its new idea -- WorkDone, software that helps companies manage their employees. The founders joined last year's accelerator program and raised about $350,000 at a $1.8 million valuation.

"With VSV, we do not have to care too much about meeting with investors, because they can help us a lot with...potential people who can invest," said Pham Kim Hung, the CEO who spent five years in Silicon Valley before co-founding TechElite back in Vietnam. "The government has to join and support startups in some way. It's critical for startups in Vietnam."

Why Flappy Bird was just the start for Vietnam's startup scene - CNET
 
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They are starting to make high tech products, though the majority of their high tech exports is still dominated by foreign/western/japanese/korean/taiwanese companies with factories in china.
Im just surprised to see chinese on here making fun of vietnam. I thought china will be the last country to make fun of vietnam, since just couple decades ago it wasnt much different from vietnam.lol So they shouldnt dismissed vietnsm so easilly, after all, just 2-3 decades ago many westerners/people here called china the sick man of Asia, and nobody believed it could have achieved what it has achieved today, even though it still has a long way to go to reach westsrn/japanese standards. So chinese members here shouldnt dismiss vietnam just yet, they should know better from their own experience. You always have to start from somewhere.

touché

profit is a measure of quality, which is why apple has high profit while badphone has no profit. also none of the phone is Vietnamese except the paint, not even its radio waves belong to Vietnam, which is why it is still inferior to a small huawei side business.

"profit is a measure of quality"

LMAO, utter crap. Did you even go to school for business or management? or anything? Please stop embarrassing yourself.

"Vietnamese except the paint, not even its radio waves belong to Vietnam, which is why it is still inferior to a small huawei side business"

:omghaha:

lol what Telecom equipment? is it optical switches, fibers, mobile towers, optical repeaters, cloud storage? do they make their own chips?

there's a reason huawei is the biggest Telecom hardware company in the world with top 3 patents.

"Patents" welcome to the 1900's.
:omghaha:
 
I've got the specs and the prices for the different version for you in this blog entry:

Bphone by BKAV – Is the Vietnamese Smartphone Better than iPhone?

The new BKAV Bphone has been creating a lot of buzz lately, at least in Vietnam. This is not the first Vietnamese smartphone (we’ve already had some from Mobiistar, Rovi and VNPT) but consumers are expecting a lot from this phone because none of previous products are successful in the market.



Unlike other manufacturers that are targeting the low or mid-range market, Bphone was claimed to be a high-end smartphone. Nguyen Tu Quang, BKAV’s CEO, even said the phone has a better design than iPhone 6 and delivers better sound quality than the Sony Xperia Z3. Many people have been doubtful because Quang was well-known for expressing excessive confidence about BKAV’s products.


The BKAV Bphone has just been officially introduced on May 26, 2015 at National Convention Center in Hanoi, Vietnam. Let’s see if it can compete in the high-end market that is dominated by iPhones. Can this be a historic milestone for the electronics industry in Vietnam?



Design

The Bphone is said to be the first smartphone in the world featuring flat design. I’m quite impressed with the sleek design. It has a 5-inch display only, so you can see it is smaller than recent flagships like iPhone 6 Plus or Samsung Galaxy S6.


You might find it familiar because it looks like a hybrid of iPhone and Sony Xperia in my opinion. It also reminds me of some Oppo products.

View attachment 243113

View attachment 243114
View attachment 243112

iPhone 6 Plus, Bphone and Samsung Galaxy S6


Features and Tech Specs

View attachment 243115


Bphone vs iPhone 6 Plus Specs. Image credit: VNExpress





    • OS: BOS (forked Android 5.0 Lollipop)
    • Network: HSDPA 21.6 Mbps
    • Display: 5-inch Sharp LCD TFT, full-HD resolution (1920 x 1080 pixels), 441 ppi
    • Gorilla Glass 3 on front and back
    • Rear camera: 13MP OmniVision sensor, Ubi Focus, Sapphire lens cover, supports recording 4K, 1080p@60fps/30fps, 720p@120fps videos
    • Front Camera: 5MP, wide 88-degree angle
    • Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 Quad Core 2.5GHz
    • RAM: 3GB
    • Internal Memory: 16GB / 64GB / 128GB
    • External memory card: not supported
    • Connectivity: Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac, 2 bands, Wi-Fi Direct, GPS, Glonass, TransferJet (500 times faster than NFC), microUSB
    • Audio: Supports hi-res FLAC, ALAC, 24-bit/192kHz
    • Microphone:noise-canceling FluenceHD
    • Battery: Li-Po 3.000 mAh supporting Quick Charge 2.0 Plus
    • 5GB of storage on Bdrive
    • Secured with built-in Firewall and BKAV Security
    • Size: 14,1 x 6,9 x 7.5 mm
    • Colors: black, white, champagne gold, 24K gold
    • Price: 9,990,000 VND (460 USD) for Black – 16GB edition, 12,960,000 VND (593 USD) for Black, White, Champagne Gold – 64GB edition, and 20,200,000 VND (925 USD) for 24K Gold – 128GB edition

I will post a review as soon as I have a chance to test the Bphone. What do you think about the made-in-Vietnam smartphone, does it have any chance to compete with Apple or Samsung?

Bphone by BKAV – Is the Vietnamese Smartphone Better than iPhone? - All about Bphone BKAV Vietnam

The presenter (Vietnam's Steve Jobs?) just played a trick by comparing the Bphone with iPhone 6 plus. Beating iPhone in hardware specifications is nothing for an android device these days. iPhone has a totally different ecosystem from android. You have to compare apple to apple, orange to orange. Under android platform, this Bphone is unimpressive at all in performance with a ridiculously high price.

Look at this Letv Max:
Original Letv MAX 4G FDD LTE Qualcomm 801 Octa Core Smart Phone Android 5.0 6.33'' 2K 4GB RAM +64GB ROM 2560*1440p 21.0MP Camera-in Mobile Phones from Phones & Telecommunications on Aliexpress.com | Alibaba Group

or this 2k HD display, 8M+20M camera, fingerprint ID with crazy $300
Original Elephone Vowney Version B 4G LTE Mobile Phone MT6795 Octa Core 2.2GHz 5.5" 4GB RAM 32GB ROM Android 5.1 Lollipop 20.7MP-in Mobile Phones from Phones & Telecommunications on Aliexpress.com | Alibaba Group

You can find many other similar android devices like the ones listed above nowadays. I am Chinese, but I never bought a product only because it is a chinese product. I only buy Chinese products when they are on par with other non-chinese products in terms of price/performance. This Bphone only matches the price of iphone without any other highlight point. I want to know how many viets will pay 500~600 bucks for it to show their patriotism.
 
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touché



"profit is a measure of quality"

LMAO, utter crap. Did you even go to school for business or management? or anything? Please stop embarrassing yourself.

"Vietnamese except the paint, not even its radio waves belong to Vietnam, which is why it is still inferior to a small huawei side business"

:omghaha:



"Patents" welcome to the 1900's.
:omghaha:
your mom is calling you for bed, as you have schools tomorrow```remember to switch off your computer and lights, which btw all made in China:disagree:
 
Not saying Bkav is not any good. I bet it is an awesome product just like its advertised. I'm just saying that it will never be the next apple. One of the reason is that apple is a CULT! It can sells shit products & people will still buy it.
 
touché



"profit is a measure of quality"

LMAO, utter crap. Did you even go to school for business or management? or anything? Please stop embarrassing yourself.

"Vietnamese except the paint, not even its radio waves belong to Vietnam, which is why it is still inferior to a small huawei side business"

:omghaha:



"Patents" welcome to the 1900's.
:omghaha:
Hehe, idiot, you even can bought a honor 6 plus soon after it entering into market, with about 600 bucks, you should buy one BBBBBBBBphone to support your Vietnamese company, that's the point for your "high-end" made in Vietnam,:-)

Not saying Bkav is not any good. I bet it is an awesome product just like its advertised. I'm just saying that it will never be the next apple. One of the reason is that apple is a CULT! It can sells shit products & people will still buy it.
From the article, you will find, the biggest selling point is made in Vietnam, hehe, as to others, no any advantage, soft? Hardware? and Made in Vietnam is a advantage for high-end? the price of 400~900 dollars make me drunk, they have strong substantial support to the price? kidding me, just to flatter Vietnamese.

If they don't change their strategy, they doom to die, that's my word. not everyone can play high-end, even Toyota high-end can't march ABB, altough Toyota sell more car, and its history not too shorter than them.

Maybe these Vietnamese run the company is patriot, but not pragmatic, or maybe just cheater.
 
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lol what Telecom equipment? is it optical switches, fibers, mobile towers, optical repeaters, cloud storage? do they make their own chips?

there's a reason huawei is the biggest Telecom hardware company in the world with top 3 patents.

Huawei success was FDI and purchasing foreign tech companies to gain tech transfers and marketshare.

FPT produces mainly network storage, fibre optic equipment and cable, semiconductor chips, phones, pc components and robotics.

chip_ltvo.jpg

ICDREC introduced the first Made in Vietnam microchip to the market last October and has been promoting it in various made-in-Vietnam applications such as GPS tracking devices, air conditioners, black boxes, smart locks and galvanometers.


Vietnamese IC chip manufacturers sign contracts with Japan

The cooperation between Vietnamese chip designer and Japanese CM Engineering is worth more than just a commercial contract. This is Japan’s recognition of Vietnamese hi-tech achievements.

Japanese firms are well known as being very choosy in selecting partners. They spent two years learning the center’s capability in meeting the requirements in infrastructure items, chip’s quality and the labor force before making final decisions.

The chips to be made by ICDREC can be used for Intel or Samsung

Vietnamese IC chip manufacturers sign contracts with Japan — Talk Vietnam

The presenter (Vietnam's Steve Jobs?) just played a trick by comparing the Bphone with iPhone 6 plus. Beating iPhone in hardware specifications is nothing for an android device these days. iPhone has a totally different ecosystem from android. You have to compare apple to apple, orange to orange. Under android platform, this Bphone is unimpressive at all in performance with a ridiculously high price.

Look at this Letv Max:
Original Letv MAX 4G FDD LTE Qualcomm 801 Octa Core Smart Phone Android 5.0 6.33'' 2K 4GB RAM +64GB ROM 2560*1440p 21.0MP Camera-in Mobile Phones from Phones & Telecommunications on Aliexpress.com | Alibaba Group

or this 2k HD display, 8M+20M camera, fingerprint ID with crazy $300
Original Elephone Vowney Version B 4G LTE Mobile Phone MT6795 Octa Core 2.2GHz 5.5" 4GB RAM 32GB ROM Android 5.1 Lollipop 20.7MP-in Mobile Phones from Phones & Telecommunications on Aliexpress.com | Alibaba Group

You can find many other similar android devices like the ones listed above nowadays. I am Chinese, but I never bought a product only because it is a chinese product. I only buy Chinese products when they are on par with other non-chinese products in terms of price/performance. This Bphone only matches the price of iphone without any other highlight point. I want to know how many viets will pay 500~600 bucks for it to show their patriotism.

Letv Max and Elephone Vowney these no name brands sound funny. Chinese are criticizing Vietnamese name brands. :rofl:

The first phone has incorrect info is it 801 quad core or 810 octacore? The second phone cpu is mediatek a weak GPU and processor from Taiwan.
 
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