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Didi Dache has proven extremely popular in the city and it is currently China’s biggest taxi app. The app counts more than three million daily transactions in three Chinese cities. This large ...
Uber‘s China aspirations may hit a huge roadblock. Kuaidi Dache and Didi Dache, the country’s two biggest taxi-calling apps, are reportedly considering a merger. The Wall Street Journal ...
For one thing, China is the “world’s largest transport market” with more than 150 million people using smartphone apps to hail taxis. And 500 cars is hardly significant in a city with 66,600 ...
Japan's SoftBank has led a round of funding in the most popular taxi app in China, Kuaidi Dache. The Financial Times reports that SoftBank led a $600 million investment in the Chinese company ...
China’s taxi app war is about to enter its second era. Just days after a leaked memo showed Uber is raising $1 billion solely for its business in China, Bloomberg reports that Didi Kuaidi ...
REUTERS/Carlos Barria/Files SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China's transport ministry has banned taxi hailing apps such as Uber Technologies Inc and local rivals Kuaidi Dache and Didi Dache from using cars ...
Even the elderly mother of Jack Ma, whose e-commerce company, Alibaba, backs one of the apps, has complained she's had trouble hailing taxis. Wang Gao, a marketing professor at China Europe ...
The Chinese government is taking a positive attitude towards taxi-hailing apps such as Didi Kuaidi and Uber, but it will not turn a blind eye to the negative aspects of these newly emerged ...
HONG KONG—China’s two largest mobile taxi-hailing applications backed by Internet giants Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd. are discussing a merger that could end their ...
Didi Dache has proven extremely popular in the city and it is currently China’s biggest taxi app. The app counts more than three million daily transactions in three Chinese cities. This large ...
Even the elderly mother of Jack Ma, whose e-commerce company, Alibaba, backs one of the apps, has complained she's had trouble hailing taxis. Wang Gao, a marketing professor at China Europe ...