Apple CEO Tim Cook is on a visit to China at the moment, around a month after the tech giant launched their new iPhone models to a collective “meh” from the Chinese market. Yesterday, he swung by the headquarters of Bytedance in Beijing to be photographed pointing at displays and shaking hands with people.
Bytedance is the controversial company behind news app Jinri Toutiao (literally “Today’s Headlines”) and short video sensation Douyin (TikTok). It’s also “the world’s hottest start-up”, according to Bloomberg.
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ByteDance Stakes a Claim in the War for Young China’s AttentionArticle Feb 27, 2018
Bytedance founder Zhang Yiming — who has taken the company from scratch to a reported valuation of 75 billion USD in just six years — was on hand to personally give Cook a tour of the office and get him up to speed on the business’ incredible growth:
Cook’s visit comes after he included Douyin (TikTok) in a list of key global apps at Apple’s WWDC2018 developers conference and after representatives from the platform attended the new iPhone launch last month.
Not familiar with Douyin (TikTok)? Here’s why it’s such a big deal:
How Douyin (TikTok) Became the Most Popular App in the WorldDouyin (TikTok) has weathered repeated controversy to be named as the most downloaded non-game app on Apple’s App Store for the first quarter of 2018Article May 09, 2018
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A Quick Guide to China’s Competing Short Video AppsBaidu, Alibaba, and Tencent have all launched Vine-like short video apps in recent months, joining the relatively established offerings of Kuaishou and DouyinArticle Sep 19, 2018
What are Chinese Netizens Saying About Bloomberg’s Supermicro “Big Hack” Story?Article Oct 08, 2018
Tencent Sues Toutiao for 1RMB as Tech Rivals’ Battle Heats UpArticle Jun 02, 2018