Không có điện thoại thông minh, làm sao gọi được Uber?
chờ họ lắp đặt màn hình to đùng như này ở trên phố nhé :)
dịch vụ do Didi, phần mềm gọi taxi của Trung Hoa, cung cấp trên toàn Thượng Hải, để người già cũng gọi được taxi...
-----
Photo credit: Pei Xin.
Another example of a seemingly incremental innovation (đổi mới sáng tạo dần dần) that could have significant consequences comes from Didi, China’s leading ride-hailing service. The company, which provided 1.4 billion rides in 2015, installed touchscreen booths — really, gigantic tablets mounted on displays — all around Shanghai so that people (especially the elderly) could still hail a Didi car without having a smartphone.
It’s a convenient but relatively minor service. Yet if this kind of thing spread, it could reshape the way entire cities look, as public surfaces everywhere become the “shared phone screen” (i.e., instead of something held as a central command center only in an individual’s hands).
Bài trước: Nâng cao hiệu quả tổ chức tour du lịch chung
Tags: china
-----
Meanwhile, in mobile, China Mobile apparently has (as of the end of last year) nearly as many 4G mobile subscribers as the entire U.S. population. Not to mention nearly three times as many total customers as there are people in the U.S.
-> cứ đấu tranh đòi ngày làm việc 8h thì đến bao giờ thoát Tàu?
-----
The average number of hours worked in China per worker in 2015 was 2,432 hours and 1,767 in the U.S. (Germany, meanwhile, comes in at 1,372 and France at 1,495). On average, the Chinese worker is likely working more than the U.S. worker; note however that this data includes factory workers and does not measure efficiency of work.
-----
Furthermore, a standard workday in China is 9AM to 9PM, and a standard work-week is 6 days long, from Monday through Saturday. This schedule is not just for a special event or right before a product launch; it’s the norm in China.