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Huawei is Ready To Beat Google Android|Huawei Is Launching it's New OS| Huawei v/s Google Android

 


 Huawei is Ready To Beat Google Android|Huawei Is Launching it's New OS

 “The world has been suffering for an extended time,” rotating Huawei chairman Guo Ping told employees during a exhortation in the week , pertaining to the lock Google has on the Android ecosystem. And so ended the executive silence on President Trump’s latest salvo, cutting Huawei’s access to the chipsets powering its flagship smartphones.

The focus of Guo’s remarks was Huawei’s answer to the loss of Google from those mobile phones. Its alternative has been within the works since last year—part HarmonyOS OS which will meet phones and other smart devices, but mostly the HMS replacement for Google Mobile Services, the apps and underlying services that drive the Android ecosystem. Huawei now has 600 million users on its ecosystem. This is a change that impacts all of these who stick with the brand.

“The world is additionally looking forward to a replacement open system,” Guo said. “And since Huawei helped Android to succeed, why not make our own system successful?” The devil’s very much in the detail here. HMS could also be bigger, brighter and bolder, as Huawei claims, but the timing of its full HarmonyOS deployment on a smartphone remains unclear. Reports that this is able to happen by the top of this civil year , perhaps as soon like the launch of the approaching Mate 40, are denied.


“HMS must have a ‘Foolish Old Man Moving Mountain Spirit’,” Guo said to rally his audience, “no matter how high the mountain is, dig an in. or less, persist and fight for an extended time, we'll definitely succeed.”

There is nothing especially new in these bullish HMS remarks. What is new, though, is that the concept anything can still get on track despite the admission from the corporate that its stockpiled custom chipsets will only see it through the launch of the Mate 40, with analysis assuming depletion early-ish next year. And immediately there's no Plan-B, as long as Trump has cut access to third-party alternatives.



“Don’t waste a chance during a crisis,” Guo Ping said of the newest U.S. attack, telling his audience that Huawei will invest heavily in HiSilicon to beat the impact of the U.S. ban, albeit that will take time. “HiSilicon will grow stronger in several years," he said, suggesting that the U.S. had created a situation that might ultimately add Huawei’s favour, as long as everyone seized upon it.

Guo described the company’s decision to launch HMS as “brave,” which “it wasn't a simple decision for us, as a smartphone company, to develop our own Huawei Mobile Services ecosystem. It's very difficult and very challenging. But we delivered a better-than-expected script for the primary year.”

Huawei has maintained throughout its time on the U.S. blacklist that it wants nothing more than a return to normal—where normal is Google restored to its new devices. But the longer this example continues, the more one can assume Huawei isn’t getting to backtrack on HMS, not as long as it secures a future for the company’s smartphones that’s not reliant on U.S. tech.

Until now, Huawei execs are notably diplomatic over the loss of Google and their preference being to revive the connection between the 2 organizations. That’s why these comments are so remarkable—it’s a surprisingly hard stance with surprisingly emotive language to require over Google and therefore the competitive landscape which will now emerge.

As hard as replacing Google is—and many analysts suggest it's near impossible, the chipset issue is far worse. But Huawei looks bent playing a long-game, with the record to try to to so. As reported by China’s state-controlled Global Times, Guo “compared cultivating HMS as a protracted war that Huawei is destined to win within the end,” telling his audience (and Google) that “it’s plausible to possess two systems during a world. And Huawei are going to be ready to survive and take the lead even in a particularly hostile environment.”

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