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96pc Samsung sets assembled locally

Bilal9

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12:00 AM, October 13, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:41 AM, October 13, 2019

No import from March

at_a_glance_18.jpg


Star Business Report

No Samsung mobile handsets will be imported to Bangladesh after March next year as its local plant is capable of meeting the domestic demand entirely.

The plant in Narsingdi is currently assembling products that account for 96 percent of Samsung’s smartphone sales in the country.

Samsung Bangladesh and its assembly partner Fair Electronics Ltd announced that the globally reputed mobile brand will start assembling its Galaxy-branded flagship products within next few months.

They shared the info at a press conference at the Pan Pacific Sonargaon in Dhaka yesterday.

Fair Electronics set up the mobile plant two years ago and began assembling a range of 4G smartphones in June last year.


In the last one year, the plant has assembled about 15 lakh units of smartphones, with prices ranging from Tk 7,500 to Tk 40,000.

Fair Electronics Chairman Ruhul Alam Al Mahbub said they are targeting to assemble 25 lakh units of smartphones in the next one year.

“We can assemble all the devices in our factory and Bangladesh will not require to import any Samsung phone after March,” he said.

He said like the garment sector, the tech industry has the potential to become the main driver of Bangladesh’s economy by way of assembling technologically sophisticated products.

“Our aim is to present Bangladesh as a technological hub to the world and we are moving forward in line with the goal,” Mahbub added. Thanks to the factory, Fair Electronics is adding about 35 percent value to its products and within the next few years, the value addition will go up to 45 percent as it is planning to set up a PCBA motherboard manufacturing system.

PCBA or printed circuit board assembly motherboard is the main component of products such as mobile phones, tablets, laptops, and computers.

Once in place, the system will be a milestone for Bangladesh, Mahbub said.

“With Samsung Galaxy flagship products, we will move to assemble tablets at our plant -- there is huge demand for tablets in the market,” said Mesbah Uddin, chief marketing officer of the company.

Of the total mobile phones in use in Bangladesh, only 30 percent are smartphones. Currently, Samsung is the top player in the smartphone segment in Bangladesh, with 31 percent market share in terms of volume and 48 percent share in terms of value.

While speaking about the challenges the market now faces, the high-ups of Fair Electronics said some companies are importing smartphones dodging taxes.

Seungwon Youn, country manager of Samsung, said it wants to be the major technological partner of Bangladesh as it was the first multinational mobile device company to set up an assembly plant in the country.

Samsung Mobile’s Senior Director HD Lee and General Manager Bomin Kim were also present at the briefing.

Fair Electronics also assembles Samsung’s home appliances such as refrigerators, air conditioners, microwave ovens and televisions.

SMARTPHONE IN INSTALMENT

Fair Electronics is planning to come up with an offer for entry-level executives and students, allowing them to buy mid-priced smartphones in installments and at affordable prices.

Within the next 10 to 14 days, they will run the pilot project where customers can have the smartphones priced Tk 15,000 to Tk 20,000 in six to 12 installments.

Interested customers can buy smartphones easily at almost zero down payment. They will only require to submit some cheques in advance, Mesbah said. No credit card payments will be required to buy the handsets.

Fair Electronics has already had offers for employees of a company and the scheme does not require them to submit any cheque.

The plant employs 1,000 skilled employees. Of them, 25 percent are female. A total of 50 engineers are employed there, including 10 from Samsung.
 
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Ha ha - burn Sanghis burn!!

iu


You hear that Sanghis, second Bangladeshi factory to churn out motherboards from SCRATCH!!

When all Sanghis can do is turn dumb screws to assemble cheap feature-phones cobbled together from cheap Chinese parts/sub-assemblies.:lol:
 
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Poor guy thinks assembly = base component manufacture lol yet again.

MOTHERBOARDS FROM SCRATCH, from a country that exported less circuit components than 90% of countries in sub-saharan africa.

Check it yourself lol:

https://www.trademap.org/

Earning less than Haitians in the number 1 economy... has a clear ultimate sad source cause in the bongled brain.

Thanks to the factory, Fair Electronics is adding about 35 percent value to its products and within the next few years, the value addition will go up to 45 percent as it is planning to set up a PCBA motherboard manufacturing system.

Even the source article slaps him in the face haha. Reading comprehension is a tough thing for CGI taka tea baby.

We all know how the "plans" (back in 2015/16) for refrigerator export or anything export wise from Walton or whichever other LDC brochure blab "company" went in the end in the reality today.

Plan plan plan some more lol.
 
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12:00 AM, October 13, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:41 AM, October 13, 2019

No import from March

at_a_glance_18.jpg


Star Business Report

No Samsung mobile handsets will be imported to Bangladesh after March next year as its local plant is capable of meeting the domestic demand entirely.

The plant in Narsingdi is currently assembling products that account for 96 percent of Samsung’s smartphone sales in the country.

Samsung Bangladesh and its assembly partner Fair Electronics Ltd announced that the globally reputed mobile brand will start assembling its Galaxy-branded flagship products within next few months.

They shared the info at a press conference at the Pan Pacific Sonargaon in Dhaka yesterday.

Fair Electronics set up the mobile plant two years ago and began assembling a range of 4G smartphones in June last year.


In the last one year, the plant has assembled about 15 lakh units of smartphones, with prices ranging from Tk 7,500 to Tk 40,000.

Fair Electronics Chairman Ruhul Alam Al Mahbub said they are targeting to assemble 25 lakh units of smartphones in the next one year.

“We can assemble all the devices in our factory and Bangladesh will not require to import any Samsung phone after March,” he said.

He said like the garment sector, the tech industry has the potential to become the main driver of Bangladesh’s economy by way of assembling technologically sophisticated products.

“Our aim is to present Bangladesh as a technological hub to the world and we are moving forward in line with the goal,” Mahbub added. Thanks to the factory, Fair Electronics is adding about 35 percent value to its products and within the next few years, the value addition will go up to 45 percent as it is planning to set up a PCBA motherboard manufacturing system.

PCBA or printed circuit board assembly motherboard is the main component of products such as mobile phones, tablets, laptops, and computers.

Once in place, the system will be a milestone for Bangladesh, Mahbub said.

“With Samsung Galaxy flagship products, we will move to assemble tablets at our plant -- there is huge demand for tablets in the market,” said Mesbah Uddin, chief marketing officer of the company.

Of the total mobile phones in use in Bangladesh, only 30 percent are smartphones. Currently, Samsung is the top player in the smartphone segment in Bangladesh, with 31 percent market share in terms of volume and 48 percent share in terms of value.

While speaking about the challenges the market now faces, the high-ups of Fair Electronics said some companies are importing smartphones dodging taxes.

Seungwon Youn, country manager of Samsung, said it wants to be the major technological partner of Bangladesh as it was the first multinational mobile device company to set up an assembly plant in the country.

Samsung Mobile’s Senior Director HD Lee and General Manager Bomin Kim were also present at the briefing.

Fair Electronics also assembles Samsung’s home appliances such as refrigerators, air conditioners, microwave ovens and televisions.

SMARTPHONE IN INSTALMENT

Fair Electronics is planning to come up with an offer for entry-level executives and students, allowing them to buy mid-priced smartphones in installments and at affordable prices.

Within the next 10 to 14 days, they will run the pilot project where customers can have the smartphones priced Tk 15,000 to Tk 20,000 in six to 12 installments.

Interested customers can buy smartphones easily at almost zero down payment. They will only require to submit some cheques in advance, Mesbah said. No credit card payments will be required to buy the handsets.

Fair Electronics has already had offers for employees of a company and the scheme does not require them to submit any cheque.

The plant employs 1,000 skilled employees. Of them, 25 percent are female. A total of 50 engineers are employed there, including 10 from Samsung.

Yes parts from vietnam and joined together in bangladesh are called assembly or made in bangladesh like the indians. Joining parts is one thing, sourcing from domestic vendors is another ball game, bangla people need to go through the manufacturing dictionary.
 
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Yes parts from vietnam and joined together in bangladesh are called assembly or made in bangladesh like the indians. Joining parts is one thing, sourcing from domestic vendors is another ball game, bangla people need to go through the manufacturing dictionary.

You need to get out of the Sanghi Shakha Reading room a bit more. There is no local cellphone motherboard manufacturing going on in India, all cheap motherboards are imported from China and screwed together AFAIK.

There is in-house flexible cellphone motherboard manufacturing in Bangladesh from scratch using several surface mount (SMT) components pick-and-place machines and wave-soldering process (Far better than simple cellphone assembly like using imported Chinese motherboards, like in India).
iu

Each one of these specialized machines cost crores of Taka and the whole plant cost 100 crores, which is beyond the Aukat of any cellphone maker in India.

Here is a Walton Smartphone video (as you can see components are made from scratch and not assembled, smd machines can be seen at 2:05),

And here are some more bonus videos,

laptop manufacturing.

Circuitboards for TV's refrigerators and laptops,
 
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The above is good for Bangladesh. However,
A philosophical tip:you dont celebrate small things like this if you want your country to succeed because you will get satisfied too easily. Acheive in so many fields that success is not a big deal anymore. Thats when your country will really reap the benefits.
 
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LOL, you are now a Sanghi too @truthseeker2010

Its ok he called all kind of ppl "sanghi" first thing before too:

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/bang...ates-discussions.418207/page-64#post-11510438

Talk about super triggered lol. But then again he has labelled ppl like @bluesky as secret accounts of others too...and demanded they pass his ABC bengali test to "prove" :lol:

So you see what I mean with this guy? Then he has to compensate with his brochure drama sissy posting.

All the while his country exports grand total of 65k of electronic components in 2018 as the reality check lol.

As you can see, the glorious shonar stronk (very much connected emotionally to the infamous 3 million shonar victim belief) brays "made from scratch" :rofl:

But maybe the funniest part is he doesnt even know what SMT and PCBA looks like....there is absolute ZILCH of it in the videos he posted on the actual floor of note....imported lame "demo"/"Trial" (that will go nowhere as usual) ftw :rofl: What a retard.
 
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LOL, you are now a Sanghi too @truthseeker2010

Its ok he called all kind of ppl "sanghi" first thing before too:

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/bang...ates-discussions.418207/page-64#post-11510438

Talk about super triggered lol. But then again he has labelled ppl like @bluesky as secret accounts of others too...and demanded they pass his ABC bengali test to "prove" :lol:

So you see what I mean with this guy? Then he has to compensate with his brochure drama sissy posting.

All the while his country exports grand total of 65k of electronic components in 2018 as the reality check lol.

As you can see, the glorious shonar stronk (very much connected emotionally to the infamous 3 million shonar victim belief) brays "made from scratch" :rofl:

But maybe the funniest part is he doesnt even know what SMT and PCBA looks like....there is absolute ZILCH of it in the videos he posted on the actual floor of note....imported lame "demo" (that will go nowhere as usual) ftw :rofl: What a retard.
Im kinda glad Bangladesh is not Pakistan anymore judging the entire Bengali population by your comment is kind of unfair though.
 
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Muh pics from muh "TRIALS" stronk!:

https://www.thedailystar.net/business/walton-kicks-trial-assembly-handsets-1467250

blabs with pictures and posturing from "trials" LOL :rofl::

https://www.thedailystar.net/business/walton-kicks-trial-assembly-handsets-1467250

We all know what the sustained success rate of walton "trials" (when it comes to any production or any export) is in the end. Still waiting on those refrigerators to Thailand from 2015 :rofl:.

The company that still does not release a basic revenue report lol (for 5+ years now?). Continually doing trials and brochures....and now some fellow scam company "symphony" has run roughshod over them on cheap <5% MVA (guess they realised the "trial" nonsense gets nowhere).

Im kinda glad Bangladesh is not Pakistan anymore judging the entire Bengali population by your comment is kind of unfair though.

It is best sometimes to leave some to their delusion. Yes do not judge whole country/ppl by what you see in individuals here.
 
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So basically you are saying that I should not be glad Bangladesh is not Pakistan anymore.

No I am talking bout the BD stronk ppl (delusions) types.... I dont know about you. I say its good riddance to that luggage (BD) if I were in your shoes. Too much drama and whining there.
 
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No I am talking bout the BD stronk ppl (delusions) types.... I dont know about you. I say its good riddance to that luggage (BD) if I were in your shoes. Too much drama and whining there.
Yes this is exactly my viewpoint. Seperation of Bangladesh is a blessing in disguise. It would have provided more surface area for india to bother us. Also Bengali people are culturally different enough to be a different country.
Funfact: If Pakistan had not done the wrong doings it did and treated everyone equally then today you would have been ruled most certainly by West Pakistan. As now Bengalis are minority as compared to west Pakistan.
 
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You need to get out of the Sanghi Shakha Reading room a bit more. There is no local cellphone motherboard manufacturing going on in India, all cheap motherboards are imported from China and screwed together AFAIK.

There is in-house flexible cellphone motherboard manufacturing in Bangladesh from scratch using several surface mount (SMT) components pick-and-place machines and wave-soldering process (Far better than simple cellphone assembly like using imported Chinese motherboards, like in India).
iu

Each one of these specialized machines cost crores of Taka and the whole plant cost 100 crores, which is beyond the Aukat of any cellphone maker in India.

Here is a Walton Smartphone video (as you can see components are made from scratch and not assembled, smd machines can be seen at 2:05),

And here are some more bonus videos,

laptop manufacturing.

Circuitboards for TV's refrigerators and laptops,

I don't think you are mature enough for me to get personal with you. I am not a commoner of south asia so just leave it there.

Anyways Samsung invested just 5000 crore in plant in india, so i hope you can get an idea of where do indians stand and what is the place of bangladesh in mobile "manufacturing". But that doesn't mean that india has aced the smart phone making. These things take a lot of effort in time, money, and industrial acumen which is not the game of third world countries.
 
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12:00 AM, October 13, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:41 AM, October 13, 2019

No import from March

at_a_glance_18.jpg


Star Business Report

No Samsung mobile handsets will be imported to Bangladesh after March next year as its local plant is capable of meeting the domestic demand entirely.

The plant in Narsingdi is currently assembling products that account for 96 percent of Samsung’s smartphone sales in the country.

Samsung Bangladesh and its assembly partner Fair Electronics Ltd announced that the globally reputed mobile brand will start assembling its Galaxy-branded flagship products within next few months.

They shared the info at a press conference at the Pan Pacific Sonargaon in Dhaka yesterday.

Fair Electronics set up the mobile plant two years ago and began assembling a range of 4G smartphones in June last year.


In the last one year, the plant has assembled about 15 lakh units of smartphones, with prices ranging from Tk 7,500 to Tk 40,000.

Fair Electronics Chairman Ruhul Alam Al Mahbub said they are targeting to assemble 25 lakh units of smartphones in the next one year.

“We can assemble all the devices in our factory and Bangladesh will not require to import any Samsung phone after March,” he said.

He said like the garment sector, the tech industry has the potential to become the main driver of Bangladesh’s economy by way of assembling technologically sophisticated products.

“Our aim is to present Bangladesh as a technological hub to the world and we are moving forward in line with the goal,” Mahbub added. Thanks to the factory, Fair Electronics is adding about 35 percent value to its products and within the next few years, the value addition will go up to 45 percent as it is planning to set up a PCBA motherboard manufacturing system.

PCBA or printed circuit board assembly motherboard is the main component of products such as mobile phones, tablets, laptops, and computers.

Once in place, the system will be a milestone for Bangladesh, Mahbub said.

“With Samsung Galaxy flagship products, we will move to assemble tablets at our plant -- there is huge demand for tablets in the market,” said Mesbah Uddin, chief marketing officer of the company.

Of the total mobile phones in use in Bangladesh, only 30 percent are smartphones. Currently, Samsung is the top player in the smartphone segment in Bangladesh, with 31 percent market share in terms of volume and 48 percent share in terms of value.

While speaking about the challenges the market now faces, the high-ups of Fair Electronics said some companies are importing smartphones dodging taxes.

Seungwon Youn, country manager of Samsung, said it wants to be the major technological partner of Bangladesh as it was the first multinational mobile device company to set up an assembly plant in the country.

Samsung Mobile’s Senior Director HD Lee and General Manager Bomin Kim were also present at the briefing.

Fair Electronics also assembles Samsung’s home appliances such as refrigerators, air conditioners, microwave ovens and televisions.

SMARTPHONE IN INSTALMENT

Fair Electronics is planning to come up with an offer for entry-level executives and students, allowing them to buy mid-priced smartphones in installments and at affordable prices.

Within the next 10 to 14 days, they will run the pilot project where customers can have the smartphones priced Tk 15,000 to Tk 20,000 in six to 12 installments.

Interested customers can buy smartphones easily at almost zero down payment. They will only require to submit some cheques in advance, Mesbah said. No credit card payments will be required to buy the handsets.

Fair Electronics has already had offers for employees of a company and the scheme does not require them to submit any cheque.

The plant employs 1,000 skilled employees. Of them, 25 percent are female. A total of 50 engineers are employed there, including 10 from Samsung.

LOL why its even a news? This is so silly...why BD ppl are so emotional and get excited about every small things.
 
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LOL why its even a news? This is so silly...why BD ppl are so emotional and get excited about every small things.
It's not a very small thing. Samsung handset has a special popularity among our peoples. But many of us can't afford buying or don't want to buy flagship phones simply because of very high cost. Although lots of people buy them, either flagship or mid range phones.

If we don't need to import Samsung, the price will be reduced and many people will buy flagship phones in reduced cost. Besides our money will stay in our country. It's a good idea to reduce import (and increase export). So by any means, it is a good news.
 
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