Huawei Will Have Its Operating System Ready This Year
Richard Yu, head of Huawei's consumer division, said the company's own operating system could be ready to replace the Google and Microsoft operating systems in the fall for China.
For the rest of the world, he added, it would begin to be used next year.
It is said that in life, as in business, the "point of no return" is a moment in which we ratify the way, or dedicate ourselves to something else.
And it is clear that the resilient response of Huawei, released by CNBC , was the least thought option, even by Donald Trump himself, one of the protagonists of this new chapter of the already commercial "battle" between the United States and China.
Is that after placing Huawei on the blacklist, Google reacted by interrupting the access of Chinese manufacturing to its Android operating system.
Fireworks or not, a subsequent license of 90 days by the Trump administration, meant that Google put that suspension on hold.
Specifically, Yu said that outside of China, the OS -Operating System-, Huawei would be ready for everyone in the first or second quarter of next year, although the company will be ready to start implementing it in China in the fall of this year. .
Yu said the new operating system would reach smartphones and laptops.
Meanwhile, he added that Huawei's application store -which will be called App Gallery- would be available within the workflow of the new operating system.
This is the time to start thinking that Apple, like the rest of the manufactures of communications that use Android, will have a new competitor.
Could Huawei be one of the great "Chinese warriors" of this commercial battle?
Could the Huawei OS become a user interface that improves the OSX experience of Apple, or become more flexible and attractive than Android itself?
More vetoes
The SD Association, the international consortium of SD and microSD memory card manufacturers, has removed Huawei from the list of companies that can use this memory unit standard, which could take away the Chinese company's right to use them in their devices.
As they have warned for the first time from the Japanese portal Sumahoinfo, in the list of members of the SD Association, which until a few days ago included Huawei, the Chinese company no longer appears.
In addition, Microsoft removed Huawei from one of its websites offering cloud equipment. On the Azure Stack product website, the Huawei logo is still on the homepage, but the company and its offers have been removed from the catalog.
The world's largest software maker still does not comment on whether to revoke Huawei's license to use the Windows operating system.
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