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Global Times✔@globaltimesnews

Chinese #smartphone makers including #Xiaomi and #OPPO, are reportedly testing #Huawei’s operating system #HongMeng OS.When asked by the Global Times when the new system, which could challenge #Google’s @Android, will be launched, Huawei executive Shao Yang said, “It’s a secret.”

4:04 PM - Jun 11, 2019


This is a very significant development if it is true. If Chinese phone makers use HongMeng, Korean use Tizen, Android is just as good as dead.
 
This is a very significant development if it is true. If Chinese phone makers use HongMeng, Korean use Tizen, Android is just as good as dead.
It is certain that Google will be put on an unreliable entities list of China, that would be a longgg list
They not only have to test HongMeng, they have to use it ...
 
Good, China's rise is truly unstoppable. Kudos to the Chinese people.
 
Global Times✔@globaltimesnews

Chinese #smartphone makers including #Xiaomi and #OPPO, are reportedly testing #Huawei’s operating system #HongMeng OS.When asked by the Global Times when the new system, which could challenge #Google’s @Android, will be launched, Huawei executive Shao Yang said, “It’s a secret.”

4:04 PM - Jun 11, 2019
Just want to hear that. Xiaomi, Oppo and other Chinese smartphone makers should join as well. That is how new ecosystem is being formed. No pain no gain!
 
Business News
June 13, 2019 / 12:03 AM / Updated 8 hours ago
Huawei asks Verizon to pay over $1 billion for over 230 patents: source

David Shepardson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Huawei Technologies Co Ltd has told Verizon Communications Inc that the U.S. carrier should pay licensing fees for more than 230 of the Chinese telecoms equipment maker’s patents and in aggregate is seeking more than $1 billion, a person briefed on the matter said on Wednesday.

Verizon should pay to “solve the patent licensing issue,” a Huawei intellectual property licensing executive wrote in February, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier. The patents cover network equipment for more than 20 of the company’s vendors including major U.S. tech firms but those vendors would indemnify Verizon, the person said. Some of those firms have been approached directly by Huawei, the person said.

The patents in question range from core network equipment, wireline infrastructure to internet-of-things technology, the Journal reported. The licensing fees for the more than 230 patents sought is more than $1 billion, the person said.

Huawei has been battling the U.S. government for more than a year. National security experts worry that “back doors” in routers, switches and other Huawei equipment could allow China to spy on U.S. communications. Huawei has denied that it would help China spy.

Companies involved, including Verizon have notified the U.S. government and the dispute comes amid a growing feud between China and the United States. The licensing fee demand may be more about the geopolitical battle between China and the United States rather than a demand for patent fees.
 
Flix Snip expands to Spain and Italy on Huawei Video
Tuesday, June 11th, 2019

Flix Snip Further Expands European Content Video Distribution with Huawei Video

Following its recent launch in Russia, Flix Snip is providing curated short-form content to Huawei Video subscribers in Spain and Italy with potential for wider distribution in the future

BARCELONA, Spain — Short-form content app and VOD service Flix Snip has announced a major distribution partnership with multinational telecommunications equipment and consumer electronics manufacturer Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. Flix Snip’s premium, short form content is now available to Huawei mobile phone users across Spain and Italy as part of the Huawei Video SVOD service. This announcement builds upon the momentum of Flix Snip’s recent launch in Russia on the MegaFon and Rostelecom telecoms services.

Huawei Video delivers a wide selection of regularly updated international, European, and local content. Subscribers in Spain and Italy can now access Flix Snip’s diverse catalogue of high-quality, short format premium entertainment content, which has a running time of 20 minutes or less. Flix Snip offers a range of genres including: drama, animation, children, family, comedy, science-fiction and horror. Compiled from top productions and filmmakers around the globe, content is localized and dubbed in Spanish and Italian.

“Flix Snip is a perfect fit for our Huawei Video service because it lets subscribers access high-quality, short-form content conveniently on the go,” says Jaime Gonzalo, VP of Huawei Mobile Services in Europe. “Our users want compelling short movies and series that they can dip in and out of. The Flix Snip service provides a huge range of content in a number of genres that meet the viewing requirements of our expanding mobile video platform.”

Sebastien Perioche, Founder & CEO, Flix Snip adds, “The way in which we consume content has changed dramatically. Viewers are more often watching video on their mobile devices and they want to access curated, premium content that’s congruent with their busy lifestyles at the touch of a finger. We are delighted to partner with Huawei and we look forward to announcing more content distribution deals around the world in the near future.”

https://www.digitaltvnews.net/?p=33043
 
Huawei Wins "Best 5G Core Network Technology" Award at 5G World Summit
2019.06.13

[London, UK, June 13, 2019] Huawei's 5G intelligent and simplified core network solution has won the "Best 5G Core Network Technology" Award at the 5G World Summit 2019 in London.

5G is set to transform whole industries and promote new applications and business models. The 5G core network, as the hub for building ubiquitous connectivity and scheduling network resources, is centered on latency. It connects things in addition to people and provides differentiated and deterministic network service capabilities. This enables 5G to better serve the industrial Internet and industry digitalization.

Huawei's 5G intelligent and simplified core network supports all-cloud-based key technologies such as three-layer decoupling, stateless design, cross-DC deployment, microservices, and A/B test. The network is built on leading cloud native, connectivity+, and edge computing technologies and is the industry's first core network to support 2G/3G/4G/5G NSA/5G SA in-depth convergence. It provides a Single Voice Core simplified voice solution and a CUPS-based distributed architecture that supports one-stop user plane plug and play, on-demand scheduling of heterogeneous edge computing resources, fast integration of third-party applications, and building of an open edge ecosystem, providing differentiated services and enabling thousands of industries.

Ma Liang, director of the Huawei’s Cloud Core Network Product Mgmt. Dept., remarked, "We are honored to win this award. Huawei has continuously invested in 5G core network R&D to gain industry leading expertise in 5G technology. We collaborate with carriers and industry partners to continuously develop 5G applications in vertical industries, enable a thriving industry ecosystem, and make full preparation for the mature commercial use of 5G.”

As of June 2019, Huawei has won 46 commercial 5G contracts globally, and has launched a series of cross-industry collaborations based on network slicing and MEC in smart grid, VR/AR, IoV, remote surgery, smart manufacturing, and other fields, greatly expanding the 5G global ecosystem. Huawei is committed to advancing this technology to better serve our customers with state-of-the-art solutions.


https://www.huawei.com/ch-en/press-events/news/2019/6/huawei-best-5g-core-network-technology-award
 
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Huawei fighting back as it makes breakthrough amid US crackdown across the globe
By Chen Qingqing Source:Global Times Published: 2019/6/13 22:53:40

Fighting back against US amid breakthrough

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Visitors browse new Huawei smartphones at the company's booth at CES Asia 2019, in Shanghai on Tuesday. The exhibition features cutting-edge technologies such as 5G, artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things. Photo: AFP

Huawei will soon help launch commercial 5G service in 15 cities across Spain by teaming up with local carrier Vodafone Spain. While the Chinese technology giant is gaining more territory in the global 5G arena, it has been also actively fighting back against the global crackdown led by Washington from both the legal and product perspectives.

European heavyweight telecom operator Vodafone will launch its 5G network in Spain on Saturday, using Huawei networks and technology, following carriers in the UK that have recently launched 5G service with the help of the Chinese company, which is also the largest telecoms equipment provider across the globe.

Spain will be the second European country with commercial 5G service after the UK.

In spite of constant US efforts in lobbying Europe to bar Huawei from 5G rollouts by citing so-called security concerns, the Chinese company has not stopped moving forward in helping local carriers to accelerate their 5G deployment.

"Huawei is the unparalleled leader in 5G," the Chinese company told the Global Times in an earlier interview, noting that rejecting Huawei will only leave the US lagging behind in the 5G race.

As of June 6, Huawei had obtained 46 5G commercial contracts in 30 countries and regions worldwide, including some allies of the US and European countries that the US has been actively persuading, Geng Shuang, spokesperson of China's Foreign Ministry, said in a recent press briefing. "I won't mention those countries by name, as it will break someone's heart," he said.

The US has been pushing hard for a ban in Europe, as more and more carriers are inclined to choose Huawei products for their 5G networks. An analysis seen by the Global Times showed that major carriers including EE, Vodafone, O2 and Three UK, all purchased radio access networks from the Chinese company.

In addition to its expanded footprints in 5G markets, Huawei has been actively working on proprietary technologies to reduce reliance on US companies in case Washington extends export controls while giving the US a taste of its own medicine, analysts said.

Huawei is reportedly asking US carrier Verizon for $1 billion in patent licensing fees for the use of more than 230 network-related patents. Huawei and Verizon representatives met in New York last week to discuss some of the patents, and these issues are larger than just Verizon, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing Verizon spokesperson Rich Young.

"Given the broader geopolitical context, any issue involving Huawei has implications for our entire industry and also raises national and international concerns," Young was quoted as saying in the report.

"Huawei is trying to prove that the US can't live without the company, as its patents cover the whole industry supply chain from technologies to services," Fu Liang, an independent industry analyst, told the Global Times on Thursday.

Huawei can live without the US market, but it will not sit passively amid this crackdown, and it will continue using the patent issue to fight back, he said.

To prepare for the worst amid the US sanctions, Huawei has also been accelerating internal innovation in core technologies like its operating system (OS) known as HongMeng.

The company will ship smartphones equipped with HongMeng OS in October, with total shipments set to reach 215 to 225 million units in the fourth quarter of 2019, according to an analyst report seen by the Global Times on Thursday.

HongMeng-equipped smartphones' target consumers will initially be in Central and Eastern Europe, as well as emerging markets, the report showed.

The upcoming release of the HongMeng OS is widely seen as a major blow to US sanctions, which led to Google's partial ban on Huawei from its Android OS.
 
JUNE 17, 2019 / 2:50 PM / UPDATED 2 HOURS AGO
Huawei says U.S. ban hurting more than expected, to wipe $30 billion off revenue
Sijia Jiang

HONG KONG (Reuters) - China’s Huawei Technologies Co Ltd has taken a harder-than-expected hit from a U.S. ban, the company’s founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei said, and slashed revenue expectations for the year.

Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei attends a panel discussion at the company headquarters in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China June 17, 2019. REUTERS/Aly Song
Ren’s downbeat assessment that the ban will hit revenue by $30 billion, the first time Huawei has quantified the impact of the U.S. action, comes as a surprise after weeks of defiant comments from company executives who maintained Huawei was technologically self-sufficient.

The United States has put Huawei on an export blacklist citing national security issues, barring U.S. suppliers from selling to the world’s largest telecommunications equipment maker and No.2 maker of smartphones, without special approval.

The firm has denied its products pose a security threat.

The ban has forced companies, including Alphabet Inc’s Google and British chip designer ARM to limit or cease their relationships with the Chinese company.

Huawei had not expected that U.S. determination to “crack” the company would be “so strong and so pervasive”, Ren said, speaking at the company’s Shenzhen headquarters on Monday.


Two U.S. tech experts, George Gilder and Nicholas Negroponte, also joined the session.

“We did not expect they would attack us on so many aspects,” Ren said, adding he expects a revival in business in 2021.

“We cannot get components supply, cannot participate in many international organizations, cannot work closely with many universities, cannot use anything with U.S. components, and cannot even establish connection with networks that use such components.”

Huawei, which turned in a revenue of 721.2 billion yuan ($104 billion) last year, expects revenue of around $100 billion this year and the next, Ren said. This compares to an initial target for a growth in 2019 to between $125 billion and $130 billion depending on foreign exchange fluctuations.

TRADE WAR
The Trump administration slapped sanctions on Huawei at a time when U.S.-China trade talks hit rough waters, prompting assertions from China’s leaders about the country’s progress in achieving self-sufficiency in the key semiconductor business.

Huawei has also said it could roll out its Hongmeng operating system (OS), which is being tested, within nine months if needed, as its phones face being cut off from updates of Google’s Android OS in the wake of the ban.

But industry insiders have remained skeptical that Chinese chip makers can quickly meet the challenge of supplying Huawei’s needs and those of other domestic technology firms.

Negroponte, founder of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab, said the U.S. ban was a mistake.

“Our president has already said publicly that he would reconsider Huawei if we can make a trade deal. So clearly that is not about national security,” he said.

“It is about something else,” Negroponte added.

Huawei’s smartphone sales have, however, been hit by the uncertainty. Ren said the firm’s international smartphone shipments plunged 40%. While he did not give the time period, a spokesman clarified the CEO was referring to the past month.

Bloomberg reported on Sunday that Huawei was preparing for a 40-60% drop in international smartphone shipments.

The CEO, however, said Huawei will not cut research and development spending despite the expected hit from the ban to the company’s finances and would not have large-scale layoffs.

($1 = 6.9239 Chinese yuan)

Reporting by Sijia Jiang in Hong Kong and Brenda Goh in Shanghai; Writing by Sayantani Ghosh; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Muralikumar Anantharaman


Huawei says U.S. ban hurting more than expected, to wipe $30 billion off revenue - Reuters
 
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"Huawei registers a new 5G logo trademark"

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Allow me to explain the hidden meaning behind the Huawei 5G logo:

You can quickly glean three numbers from the logo 5, 7 (G=7th letter) and 8 (infinity upright).

From a numerology perspective:

5+7 (G=7th letter)=12
5+8 (infinity upright)=13

The Huawei 5G logo actually encodes a Pythagorean triple (a^2 + b^2 = c^2 || 5^2 + 12^2 = 13^2)!!!

Whoever designed this logo is both a mathematician and numerologist... It's such a carefully thought out design based on math (&science)!
 
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Pythagorean triples: (a^2 + b^2 = c^2)

(3, 4, 5)
(5, 12, 13) <= Huawei 5G logo
(8, 15, 17)
(7, 24, 25)
(20, 21, 29)
(12, 35, 37)
(9, 40, 41)
(28, 45, 53)
(11, 60, 61)
(16, 63, 65)
(33, 56, 65)
(48, 55, 73)
(13, 84, 85)
(36, 77, 85)
(39, 80, 89)
(65, 72, 97)

The Huawei 5G logo is special becoz it takes after the 2nd simplest Pythagorean triple...
 
Huawei's patent reveals dual side foldable phone - Huawei Central
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By Amit
Posted on June 18, 2019

huawe-mate-x-featured-1.jpg

The current gen Mate X foldable phone comes with a display that unfolds from only one side, and a recent patent reveals that the company is also planning a design that includes dual side foldable display.

Huawei registered trademarks for Mate V, Mate F and Mate Fold

On May 31, 2019, WIPO (World Intellectual Property Office) published a new patent of Huawei entitled as ‘Foldable mobile device’, revealing a new kind of folding type, as the patent was spotted and illustrated by LetsGoDigital.

According to the patent, the display of the device unfolds in a similar manner of Mate X but from both left and right sides, and the center part remains active while the device is folded.

There is a total of three models patent filed by the company, first with widescreen bezels on the head and chin, containing – camera, sensors, and a home button. The second model only has bezels on the head, which includes a camera along with necessary sensors.

The third model is more advanced, and it’s completely bezel-less, its display expands from the front to both left and right and while being folded the display covers the entire rear sides.

Currently, there’s confirmation that these designs would go in production but there’s a huge possibility that it may in the future.

Have a look at the patent illustrations below:

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huawei-opvouwbare-telefoon-770x508.jpg

huawei-mate-opvouwbare-smartphone-770x508.jpg

nieuwe-opvouwbare-telefoon-770x663.jpg
 

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