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Huawei said to be developing a ‘plan B’ operating system for smartphones

Huawei is said to be developing its own mobile operating system to run on its smartphones.

  • Huawei is said to be developing its own mobile operating system, which the company said is a “plan B” if relations with Google were ever to sour.
  • Now that Huawei has been banned from accessing parts of Google’s Android mobile operating system after the US government placed the company on a trade blacklist, it’s as good a time as any for Huawei to speed up development toward its own mobile operating system.
  • Little is known about Huawei’s home-grown OS, but it’s been reported that it’s called “HongMeng OS.”
  • Even if Huawei can develop an amazing mobile operating system of its own, it would still need to convince app developers to bring popular apps to Huawei’s own mobile app store. 

The Chinese telecoms company Huawei has been banned from accessing parts of Google’s Android mobile operating system after the US government placed the company on a trade blacklist.While it’s not an all-out ban of Huawei devices, the blacklisting would affect future Huawei devices and could mean that current Huawei phones will stop getting Android updates.Without Android, Huawei phones could be nothing more than doorstops made of glass and silicon chips. The Android operating system is not only the functional foundation of all Android smartphones, but it also brings the Google Play app store, which contains all of Google’s popular apps, like Gmail, YouTube, and Google Maps, as well as the ever-growing list of popular third-party apps.  In order to prepare for a potentially Android-less future, Huawei is said to be developing its own mobile operating system to run on its smartphones. 
Huawei’s homegrown mobile operating system is called “HongMeng OS,” according to a tweet from the Global Times.Huawei’s own-developed smart phone Operating System, reportedly named “HongMeng OS”, is being trialled out and will gradually replace the Android system. HongMeng OS has supposedly been under development for seven years since 2012. Wang Chenglu, the president of Huawei’s consumer business software engineering, said in September 2018 that while developing an operating system itself wasn’t difficult, it’s the ecosystem and app support that would be the biggest roadblock for a Huawei-made mobile operating system.Mobile platforms absolutely need a healthy ecosystem, especially when it comes to apps. Lack of app support will almost certainly foretell the death of any newcomer to mobile platforms. It was always the biggest problem with Microsoft’s Windows mobile platform.For Microsoft, it was a never-ending cycle of doom: Windows Phones had the lowest market share, so app developers didn’t want to spend the time and money to develop apps for Windows phones. And since popular apps were slow to become available on the Windows mobile platform if at all the Windows Phone had significant issues gaining any market share.Samsung also tried its hand in 2015 at offering phones that ran on the company’s own homegrown operating system, called Tizen. Needless to say, Samsung Tizen phones aren’t exactly popular. In a Samsung Tizen phone review, Ars Technica wrote “We weren’t impressed. It felt like a hollow copy of Android without any apps.” And that’s exactly what a Huawei operating system would likely feel like, too. 
Chinese smartphone users are already used to handling Android phones that don’t come with Google Play, including Google’s own apps and all the popular third-party apps available from the Play Store Google Play and Google’s apps are banned in China. Elsewhere, however, where access to Google Play, Google apps, and popular third-party apps are plentiful, consumers aren’t very likely at all to adopt Huawei smartphones that don’t have access to the apps they want.Google’s lack of support could have massive implications for Huawei’s global smartphone business, and its standing as the second or third-biggest smartphone maker is in jeopardy. 
It’s possible however that Huawei could adopt the open-source and bare-bones version of Android. Huawei’s own interface that runs on top of Android on its smartphones, called EMUI, could potentially make Google’s ban unnoticeable to the typical smartphone user. Huawei could resume as normal, at least for the consumer in China.Still, without active support from Google for new features, future updates, and future versions of Android, Huawei would be under more strain to bring high-end features to its future smartphones.
Google’s support would have been important for Huawei to develop a version of Android that runs on Huawei’s highly anticipated foldable Mate X smartphone.Now Huawei is on its own. We’ll have to wait and see how it all plays out, not just for Huawei’s regular smartphones but also its foldable smartphones.

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