The Telegram (St. John's)

Huawei launches new operating system for phones

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SHENZHEN, China — China’s Huawei Technologi­es launched its Harmony operating system for smartphone­s on Wednesday, looking to recover from U.S. sanctions that have hobbled its handset business.

Huawei will start rolling out Harmonyos on selected smartphone models, offering users the chance to switch from the current operating system based on Google’s Android platform.

The use of Harmonyos means the company will no longer be wholly reliant on Android. U.S. sanctions banned Alphabet Inc.’s Google from providing technical support to new Huawei phone models and access to Google Mobile Services, the bundle of developer services upon which most Android apps are based.

Rather than being a like-for-like replacemen­t, Huawei is billing Harmonyos as an Internetof-things platform, aimed at operating on and connecting other devices such as laptops, smartwatch­es, cars and appliances.

The company unveiled several new products using Harmonyos, including a tablet, a smart watch and a stylus, during a video launch from the company’s headquarte­rs in Shenzhen.

The presentati­on ended with a teaser for the flagship P50 phone, whose spring launch was delayed “for reasons that everyone is aware of,” said Richard Yu, the CEO of Huawei’s Consumer Business Group.

Huawei is aiming to have Harmonyos on 200 million smartphone­s and 100 million third-party smart devices by the end of the year, said Wang Chenglu, president of Huawei Consumer Business Group’s software department, who has led Huawei’s efforts to develop Harmonyos since 2016.

(Reuters)

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