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February 20, 2013 11:43 pm GMT

Smartphone Rental Startup Handy Expands Out Of Hong Kong

handy logoHandy, a smartphone rental service out of Hong Kong, has launched operations in Singapore. The company offers smartphones for rent to travelers at $9 (HKD 68) a day$12 (S$15) a day in Singaporeand the price includes unlimited 3G data and international calls. The Handy brand comes under its CEO, Terence Kwoks startup effort called Tink Labs, and is its first and only project thus far. The firm is less than a year old, but today has 75 people working for it. It started in April last year, and in September launched Handy in Kwoks home country of Hong Kong. So far, it has placed its service counters at tourist hot spots, such as at the Hong Kong International Airport, as well as the Convention and Exhibition Centre in Wan Chai and a visitor center run by the countrys tourism board located in the Tsim Sha Tsui district. Kwok, who was born in Hong Kong but raised in the US, said the decision to expand so soon in Singapore was in large part accelerated by the local tourism boards offer to allow Handy to set up a service desk at its visitor center along the Orchard Road shopping street. We werent planning to launch in Singapore till the second quarter of the year, initially, he said. Handys devices are primarily Samsung Galaxy Note phones, and its software developers have put a custom UI on them that opens at a landing page with deals and recommendations for sightseeing and restaurants. Its still populating the Singapore version with more content, but its Hong Kong version includes deals with tours and ticketed items such as ferry rides that you can book through the app. Just show the phone at the venue and youre set, said Kwok. What I found surprising about the UI was that the company will also let you install apps from Google Play, which many firms dont allow. Itll also allow tethering, so for the price, you could tether a laptop in a pinch and get some surfing done outside of a Wi-Fi zone. So far, Handy has 2,000 phones in its inventory, and is looking to strike up bulk deals with Android manufacturers to increase its stock. When a user rents out a device, the company puts an authorization hold on their credit cards, so in the event of a device getting broken or lost, the amount to fix or

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