BenQ Corp (明基), one of the nation's major consumer electronics makers, yesterday unveiled its latest 37-inch and 46-inch liquid-crystal-display (LCD) televisions, vowing to secure a 15 percent share of the large-size flat-panel TV market in Taiwan a year from now.
The company also expects that the TVs will soon replace plasma-display-panel (PDP) TVs, which currently dominate the large-sized TV market.
"With improved brightness, a longer life, [and] radiation-free, power-saving and other advantages, LCD TVs are very likely to replace PDP TVs in the near future," Peter Chen (
Consumers in Taiwan buy around 1 million new TVs each year, with models measuring 37 inches or more accounting for 10 percent of sales, Chen said.
But PDP TVs' leadership position will not last long, as larger LCD TVs gradually hit the market, he added.
Michael Lin (林世華), a senior marketing manager at BenQ, said domestic sales for TVs larger than 37 inches are at about 110,000 units per year, with PDP TVs accounting for 60,000 units and cathode-ray-tube, or traditional TVs, accounting for 50,000 units. In the next few years, LCD TVs may take about half of the market, Lin said.
The suggested prices for the two new models are NT$72,900 (US$2,283) for the 37-inch model and NT$199,000 for the 46-inch model. But to help the new TVs -- especially the 37-inch version -- become a mainstream product, smaller models may retail for about NT$69,000, Chen said.
The strategy seems to have worked, as retailers have ordered the first 500 units of the 37-inch model, Lin said.
But the price for its current 32-inch LCD TV, which was NT$54,900 on
retailer Tsann Kuen's (燦坤) Web site, will remain at the current level due
to the strong demand, Lin said.
For the first half of the year, BenQ ranked No. 1 for sales of 32-inch LCD
TVs in Taiwan, selling about 42,000 units, or a 15 percent market share, he
said.
Taiwanese firms have increased investment in the Philippines in recent years as Manila’s ties with Washington deepen and global supply chains continue to shift away from China, an expert at the Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research (CIER, 中華經濟研究院) said yesterday. The Philippines had not been among Taiwanese investors’ top choices in Southeast Asia, CIER Taiwan ASEAN Studies Center director Kristy Hsu (徐遵慈) said at a seminar in Taipei. However, Taiwan’s investment in the country has grown significantly since the COVID-19 pandemic, reaching US $257 million last year, a high in recent years, she said. Although Taiwan’s total investment in the Philippines still lags
Intel Corp regards Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) as a longstanding partner, as the US chipmaker would continue outsourcing production of advanced chips to TSMC, Intel chief executive officer Lip-Bu Tan (陳立武) said yesterday. “I don’t look at people as competitors. I look at the collaboration... Nvidia is also, you know, a good friend,” Tan told a news conference following his keynote speech at the Computex trade show in Taipei. “It’s a very trusted partnership for us... We are a big, top customer for them, and we’re going to continue doing that,” he said, referring to TSMC, the world’s largest foundry
Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (鴻海精密) yesterday said it would work with US chipmaker Intel Corp to jointly develop and deploy next-generation artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure and intelligent computing platforms in a move to capture booming demand for AI computing systems. Hon Hai, also known as Foxconn Technology Group (富士康), said in a statement that the partnership would combine its global manufacturing scale, system integration expertise and AI data center deployment capabilities with Intel’s strengths in processor architecture, silicon technologies and software ecosystem. The companies said they plan to work on equipment used in AI data centers, including server racks powered by
Artificial intelligence (AI) agents would supplant smartphones as the center of people’s digital lives, fundamentally reshaping personal devices and driving a major computing upgrade cycle, Qualcomm Inc CEO Cristiano Amon said yesterday. In his keynote speech for this year’s Computex trade show in Taipei, Amon said that the rise of "agentic AI" — AI systems capable of reasoning, planning and carrying out tasks autonomously — would transform how people interact with technology across phones, PCs, vehicles and wearable devices. Describing the technology as the next major evolution in computing, Amon said that "2026 is the year of agents.” For decades, smartphones have sat