Huawei HarmonyOS launched after the company was put on a U.S

According to a report from tech research firm TechInsights, Huawei's homegrown HarmonyOS operating system is poised to overtake Apple's iOS in China t

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According to a report from tech research firm TechInsights, Huawei's homegrown HarmonyOS operating system is poised to overtake Apple's iOS in China this year. As a result, Huawei may soon be on the verge of surpassing Apple in one metric. The open-source operating systems developed primarily by Google, iOS and Android, will continue to dominate the global market.


Huawei HarmonyOS 


After the United States imposed sanctions on Huawei, the company's decision to create its own operating system took on greater significance. The Chinese organization initially utilized the Android working framework in its cell phones, yet reported HarmonyOS in August 2019, only a couple of months after the Trump organization added Huawei to the Substance Rundown, which constrained the organization to get Washington's endorsement for any acquisition of U.S. innovation. Huawei chiefs had recently depicted the improvement of its own working framework as a "Plan B," as the organization confronted the possibility of being banished from utilizing key equipment or programming with U.S. starting points.


Huawei's underlying progress in getting HarmonyOS going could be a pointer that the Chinese firm is keeping up with its specialized skill despite U.S. sanctions. Huawei is currently preparing for one more significant progress by getting ready to completely leave Android. Huawei's upcoming update will bring HarmonyOS, which Huawei calls a "pure" operating system, out of its compatibility with Android apps in the past.


HarmonyOS-compatible app versions are in high demand from Chinese tech companies. Chinese firms are apparently increase endeavors to recruit engineers for HarmonyOS, including organizations like Alipay proprietor Insect Gathering and McDonald's China.


At its annual developer conference in August, Huawei stated that more than 2.2 million third-party developers are developing apps for HarmonyOS on more than 700 million devices.


Huawei's rebound

The ascent of HarmonyOS is additionally coming as Huawei effectively gets back to the 5G cell phone market, represented by its unexpected arrival of the Mate 60 Master in August last year. Despite sanctions imposed by the United States against both Huawei and the Chinese chip industry as a whole, the phone has a cutting-edge seven-nanometer chip developed locally.


State media outlets and commentators hailed the Mate 60 Pro smartphone as a national achievement as soon as it was released. The organization sold 1.6 million Mate 60 handsets in its initial a month and a half of deals, as per statistical surveying firm Contradiction Exploration.


“With its turnaround on the back of its devices from the Mate 60 series, Huawei has been the clear standout in October. In a report on the Chinese smartphone market that was released in November, Counterpoint Research China analyst Archie Zeng stated, "Growth has been stellar with its new launch marketing and strong media coverage around its ‘Made in China’ chipset."


According to estimates made by senior analyst Ivan Lam at Counterpoint Research, Huawei will hold approximately 13% of the smartphone market in China in 2023, up from 7.6% in 2022.


From its previous low of $89.6 billion in 2021, the business projects sales of almost $100 billion in 2023. "We've managed to weather the storm after years of hard work," Huawei rotating chairman Ken Hu told employees at the end of December. In any case, the organization still can't seem to outperform the $137 billion in income announced in 2020.


Apple, which considers China to be one of its most important overseas markets, may suffer from Huawei's return. Deals of Apple's iPhone 15, which the organization delivered half a month after Huawei's Mate 60 Master, failed to meet expectations in its initial 17 days marked down, contrasted with Apple's past models.


Apple is additionally fighting with new guidelines from Beijing. Soon, Chinese officials will require a license from the government for all programs sold on Chinese app stores, including Apple's. When the grace period ends in March, Apple may be forced to remove thousands of apps from its Chinese store.

Labels: #Mobile #OS

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