• @nutomicA
    link
    73 years ago

    My Huawei phone still seems to run on Android (according to the kernel version). Does anyone know more details when this will be available?

    • @Axaoe
      link
      73 years ago

      I havent seen more than a list of eligible devices and a general timeframe like the above article describes.

      Some sources stated that it’s only for the ALS models (Chinese) and that others arent getting the update due to not being sold in China. I’d assume that someone will find a way to opt-in early on said devices (maybe through their desktop update tool or changing regions) but I couldnt locate a nice list with dates and models for outside of China.

      The closest I’ve seen is this one:

      https://www.huaweiupdate.com/harmonyos-2-0-eligible-devices-updates-news-and-more-june-04-2021/

      • @nutomicA
        link
        23 years ago

        Thanks, looks like I will have to wait a while longer.

    • @the_tech_beast
      link
      33 years ago

      Existing models before the Huawei ban won’t face any issues. They will still run android.

      • @nutomicA
        link
        53 years ago

        Why do you think that the upgrade will cause issues?

        • @the_tech_beast
          link
          33 years ago

          Not about the harmony OS but about android support on Huawei mobiles. I meant that people will still be able to use Android without any issues on existing huawei models.

          • @nutomicA
            link
            43 years ago

            Afaik Harmony OS is just a fork of Android, not like they rewrote it from scratch (that would take a lot more time).

  • @TheAnonymouseJokerM
    link
    5
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    I have been a supporter (not fanboy) of Huawei, but let me be honest, HarmonyOS is not exactly a new OS, as in the thing replacing Android here. It is still AOSP based, but they are calling multiple things HarmonyOS here, one being the distributed ecosystem, other being the microkernel for TVs and other devices.

    I have been following this whole tirade since before the first developer kit for HongmengOS leaked on GizmoChina.

    On one hand I think Huawei is misrepresenting what they are doing for phones, while on the other hand this whole thing is going beyond the integration of Apple’s device ecosystem. I am interested, either way, but a more truthful PR for masses would have gained them more success.

    I still remember this getting leaked on June 13, 2019 on 4Chan

    picture

  • 10_0
    link
    13 years ago

    atleast there will be three monopolies now

      • Marxism-Fennekinism
        link
        4
        edit-2
        3 years ago

        Wait is it actually? That would probably make it the biggest co-op in the world.

      • @vegai
        link
        2
        edit-2
        3 years ago

        deleted by creator

        • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆OP
          link
          43 years ago

          It’s not really disputed, and the article is just trying to throw shade. For example, this gem:

          Huawei’s ownership is a murky matter because the company has never, in more than three decades of existence, sold shares to the public.

          It’s like they don’t understand the concept of a cooperative? If a company sells public shares then it’s owned by share holders.

          Also, painting the fact that Huawei works with the government as being outlandish is also hilarious. Every US tech company works with US government and gets massive government subsidies.

          In fact, if the government exercises some control over the company that’s actually a very good thing.

        • @TheAnonymouseJokerM
          link
          03 years ago

          New York Times calling Huawei bad is like Global Times calling Apple bad. Can we agree this is not disputed?

          • @vegai
            link
            1
            edit-2
            3 years ago

            deleted by creator

            • @TheAnonymouseJokerM
              link
              -13 years ago

              What if they could? And why would they need to, when Ren’s leadership is clearly top notch for coworker employees?

              • @vegai
                link
                1
                edit-2
                3 years ago

                deleted by creator

                • @TheAnonymouseJokerM
                  link
                  -13 years ago

                  Huawei has not died off amidst a total lack of chip foundry supplies, and its business is going well. Even countries that face sanctions from USA have a hard time struggling.

      • @k_o_t
        link
        23 years ago

        wait, really?

      • soronixa
        link
        13 years ago

        can we agree that monopolies are still a bad thing for consumers?

          • soronixa
            link
            13 years ago

            they’re building an ecosystem, I assume it means something like apple’s ecosystem which is just a pretty prison. Huawei may implement it differently, but in genral it’s not a good sign when a company tries to do it. and things like not having an official method of unlocking the bootloader gives me the feeling that they’re not going to have an open ecosystem.

            now don’t get me wrong, the fact that they’re trying to distance themselves from google is a good thing, but if it means another colsed environment where it’s in company’s interest to imprison end users, then it is terrible.

            • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆OP
              link
              43 years ago

              As far as I know HarmonyOS is based on AOSP, so I would actually expect the core technology to stay open. I’d like to see what they actually do with it before passing judgement.