Mobile World Congress 2020 is officially canceled.
The world’s biggest annual phone show has been called off due to concerns over the coronavirus, according to an email from GSMA CEO John Hoffman obtained by Bloomberg. GSMA is the mobile industry organization that runs MWC.
The event was already in shambles as Facebook, Sprint, Cisco, AT&T, BT, Nokia, Vodafone and Deutsche Telekom all announcedthey were pulling out of the event just today. These companies joined Amazon, Ericsson, LG, Nvidia, Sony, TCL, and ZTE which had all previouslysaid they were no longer attending the event due to coronavirus fears.
The coronavirus, which originated in Wuhan, China, has infectedover 45,000 people so far. More than 1,100 have since died from the outbreak and over 25 countries are now reporting cases of the coronavirus.
GSMA had insisted the event was still on as of early Wednesday. However, in the email canceling this year's MWC, Hoffman claims the coronavirus outbreak has made it “impossible” to move forward. GSMA had previously attempted to curb fears by taking protective measures for this year's event, like banning people from the Hubei province in China from going to the event. It had also urged vendors and attendees to take certain hygiene precautions, such as advising against shaking hands.
MWC, which was set to take place between Feb. 24 and 27 in Barcelona, is a massive industry trade event which typically features many Chinese mobile phone manufacturers.
The event cancelation could result in a loss of $492 million euros, which is what MWC was projected to bring to the local Barcelona economy. The show typically createsmore than 14,000 jobs as well.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Mobile World Congress has been canceled due to coronavirus fears-粲然可观网
sitemap
文章
6467
浏览
5929
获赞
3
Astrology tech can provide a safe space for the LGBTQ community, but there are limitations
Mashable is celebrating Pride Monthby exploring the modern LGBTQ world, from the people who make upQAnon hits the mainstream and Trump is on board
UPDATE: Nov. 3, 2020, 7:22 p.m. EST: It's finally election day in the U.S. and Marjorie Taylor GreenMeteorologist's Apple Watch contradicts his forecast during live broadcast
People accidentally trigger Siri on their Apple devices all the time, but it usually doesn't chime iYouTuber MrBeast's 'Finger on the App' challenge went for 70 hours
Jimmy "MrBeast" Donaldson is at it again.The YouTuber, who is known for his elaborate stunts and cas17 times Anthony Hopkins' Twitter feed was the most wholesome place on the internet
There aren't many places on the internet that can be classified as "unequivocally wholesome".Sir AntThe disturbing underbelly of the 'step' porn trend
Welcome to Porn Week, Mashable's annual close up on the business and pleasure of porn.Pop onto PornhThe celebrity COVID calendar meme is here and it's bleak as hell
A whole new slew of horrors comes with each month of 2020, and those horrors inspire some hilariouslAirbnb bans 'party houses' following Halloween shooting
Five dead, and four injured. A Halloween house party in Orinda, California, took an unexpected and dHere’s why everyone’s talking about 'Christian Girl Autumn'
Are you wondering why, in the full heat of summer, you've seen so many tweets roasting a lifestyle b'Turbo relationships' and the people falling in love at high speed during the pandemic
Taking it slow has a whole new meaning during a pandemic. In the time before COVID-19, putting on thRemember voice tweets? Lmao.
Back in the day, and by "the day" I mean June 2020, Twitter launched a new feature that allows peoplElon Musk's Cybertruck window
Sometimes big unveils don't always go to plan.Tesla CEO Elon Musk took the stage in Los Angeles ThurThe best viral videos of 2019 (so far)
Can you believe that we're already halfway through a year of viral videos? These days it seems likeFacebook's sins haunt Mark Zuckerberg at Libra congressional hearing
Mark Zuckerberg arrived on Capitol Hill Wednesday ready to discuss Facebook’s proposed digitalThe surprising reason Lily Allen's 'Smile' went viral on TikTok
TikTok users all over the globe are dancing like mad to Lily Allen's "Smile," 14 years after its rel