Peter Chou

Peter Chou (Chinese: 周永明) or Win Than (Burmese: ဝင်းသန်း)[1] (born 24 November 1956) is the former HTC CEO chief executive officer and a co-founder of HTC. Chou founded HTC with Cher Wang (王雪紅) and H.T.Cho (卓火土) before being named CEO of HTC in 2004, succeeding H.T.Cho. In order to spearhead innovation initiatives for HTC, Chou would later serve as head of HTC Future Development Lab starting early 2015, with Cher Wang succeeding as CEO.

Peter Chou
周永明
Born
Win Than ဝင်းသန်း

1956 (1956) (age 64)
NationalityTaiwan
Alma materNational Chengchi University (2003)
National Taiwan Ocean University (1985)
Mandalay Regional College
OccupationEntrepreneur
EmployerHTC
Digital Equipment Corporation
Notable work
猴子理論
AwardsNational Taiwan Ocean University honorary engineering Ph.D. (2011)
National Taiwan Ocean University Distinguished Alumni (2009)

Early life and education

Chou, a member of the Burmese Chinese community, was born in Mandalay, Burma (now Myanmar) in 1956.[2] Chou's father worked in Burma's jade industry. He attended Mandalay Regional College.[2]

After school, Chou went to Taiwan and continued to study part-time in the car audio company assembling electronic parts.[3] Chou graduated from National Taiwan Ocean University in 1985 with a degree in Electrical Engineering. In 1987, Chou became a senior engineer at Digital Equipment Corporation; in 1997, HP merged with DEC.[4]

In 1997, he founded HTC with Cher Wang (王雪紅) and H.T.Cho (卓火土). Chou had received an Executive MBA from National Chengchi University in 2003 after co-founding HTC. He attended Harvard Business School's six-week Advanced Management Program.

In 2013, HTC launched one of the first smartphones to offer commercial off-the-shelf compatibility with Burmese language text.[5][6]

Career

Before HTC

Prior to joining HTC, Chou spent 10 years with Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC), eventually serving as director before DEC’s later merger with HP Corporation.

HTC Corporation

Chou was asked to join the founding of HTC Corporation by former superior H.T. Cho in 1997, and was named CEO in 2004. Under his leadership, Chou has led the charge not only to establish HTC as a global smartphone brand, but also the shaping of the global smartphone industry landscape in its early years. Chou’s term as CEO was credited with many industry innovations, from the first 4G-capable smartphone to one of the first smartphones to offer commercial off-the-shelf compatibility with Burmese language text.

With his strong belief and industry experience in the values of entrepreneurship and innovation, Chou saw to adjusting his CEO leadership roles to directing product initiatives at the forefront as head of HTC Future Development Lab, with Cher Wang succeeding the mantle as CEO of HTC Corporation in early 2015.

Chou has received numerous awards including Laptop Magazine’s #5 most influential mobile executive, the prestigious Wireless Week Leadership Award for extraordinary achievements in mobile communications and T3 Magazine’s #13 most influential technology executive.

Personal life

In his spare time, Chou enjoys reading, appreciating all forms of art and listening to classical music.

gollark: Applied Science was the second one in Spirit's list, no?
gollark: If it's just static content, I can add it to the endless list of random things on my website, but there would probably need to be a way to update it.
gollark: Time to save that on my notes thing somewhere and maybe pay attention to it eventually!
gollark: Is there a list of these "good" engineering YouTubers somewhere? I forgot the ones people were talking about earlier and I'm interested in new stuff to watch.
gollark: I totally would, assuming you count occasionally alt-tabbing to it sitting through it.

References

  1. Video on YouTube
  2. Yan Pai (16 May 2012). "Peter Chou, CEO of HTC Corp, Reveals He Was Born in Burma". The Irrawaddy. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  3. 不只產品創新,策略創新更獲肯定 Archived 2014-01-16 at the Wayback Machine
  4. C咖出頭天/從緬甸僑生到手機大王
  5. "First Burmese font smartphones launched". Mizzima. 14 January 2013. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  6. "Cool-tech (HTC Butterfly)". BBC Burmese (in Burmese). 17 January 2013. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
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