Earlier this week, Pete Lau had confirmed that OnePlus' first 5G -enabled smartphone would be unveiled in May next year. He also said that this would not be a successor to the OnePlus 6T, and instead be the first of a premium brand considering it could be $200-300 (around Rs. 14,300-Rs. 21,500) more expensive than the OnePlus 6T.According to a report by PCMag, OnePlus CEO Pete Lau says that he sees a lot of demand for smaller phones, and he wants to deliver that next year. However, he says the only problem is the battery life. If the phones become smaller, it will be very tough to squeeze in the large batteries people are now used to.Pete Lau also disclosed that he would love to make a smaller phone, but that battery capacity is the number one reason why the company is yet to do that. Pretty much every smartphone the.
A leaked photo, seemingly taken from an internal OnePlus meeting, has surfaced online apparently showing CEO Pete Lau with a device that could be either the OnePlus 7, or another unnamed 5G.
On Monday, OnePlus shared an interview on its forums in which its CEO Pete Lau answered some questions from fans. Of course, it included things like how much he liked his job, which phone he.
In an interaction with Time of India, OnePlus CEO Pete Lau said, “I think moving forward we are going to — at least for now — stick with current strategy by introducing two products; wherein one will be affordable and the other one be priced higher.”. OnePlus is currently dominating the premium smartphone market in countries like India, where it holds a huge 42 percent market share .
OnePlus CEO Pete Lau That in itself is remarkable, but when you read the spec list, the feat becomes more impressive: a Qualcomm 801 processor, Sony-made Exmor camera sensor, a 5.5-inch screen.
OnePlus debuted a new concept phone, the OnePlus Concept One McLaren Edition, at the Consumer Electronics Show this year, so Lau came on the show to discuss what the design of the phone means.
As part of a recent visit to China to promote the Chinese edition of our Big Bang Disruption book, we had the opportunity to interview Pete Lau, CEO of smartphone start-up OnePlus, at the company .