What's new

Huawei News and Analyses

Lakala's Shares Jump to All-Time High on Huawei Pay Tie-Up

TANG SHIHUA
DATE : FEB 24 2020/SOURCE : YICAI

top.jpg


Lakala's Shares Jump to All-Time High on Huawei Pay Tie-Up

(Yicai Global) Feb. 24 -- Lakala Payment's stock price climbed to a historic high this morning after the Chinese fintech firm said that it will join hands with telecoms giant Huawei Technologies to make Huawei Pay more successful.

Lakala's share price [SHE:300773] rose by 10 percent to CNY101.37 (USD14.42) with a market cap of CNY36.9 billion (USD5.2 billion).

The Beijing-based payment service provider has penned a cooperation framework agreement with Huawei, it said in a statement yesterday, without providing financial details.

Shenzhen-based Huawei introduced Huawei Pay in 2016 to offer easy cashless payments to its smartphone users.

Once Lakala's merchants start accepting Huawei Pay, the latter mobile wallet's users can enjoy an expanding network of services, the statement added.

Established in 2005, Lakala was the first third-party payments firm to get the green light from China's central bank. By the end of last June, the company had served 21 million merchants such as supermarkets, real estate firms, and insurers.

https://yicaiglobal.com/news/lakala-shares-jump-to-all-time-high-on-huawei-pay-tie-up-
 
Huawei opens new factory in France, targeting European market

Source:Global Times Published: 2020/2/28


f84658a2-2f2d-4021-be8a-a4fd277f06fd.jpeg

A staff member tests the speed with a Huawei 5G mobile phone at Huawei 5G Innovation and Experience Center in London, Britain, on Jan. 28, 2020. (Xinhua/Han Yan)



Huawei on Thursday announced the opening of a wireless product manufacturing plant in France which will produce mainly for the European market.

Analysts believe Huawei's efforts to construct a new factory will help build its brand image in Europe, contribute to the local economy and create more jobs.

The new plant, which is designed to be a highly automated intelligent manufacturing plant, will focus on the production of 4G and 5G wireless communications equipment, according to a document Huawei sent to the Global Times on Friday.

"The new plant in France could contribute to local economic growth and create jobs. This will further help Huawei establish its brand image in France and Europe," Xiang Ligang, a telecoms industry expert, told the Global Times on Friday.

The project is expected to generate 1 billion euros ($1.1 billion) in annual output and directly create 500 jobs, according to Huawei.

The Chinese company also announced the opening of its sixth research and development (R&D) center in France at the beginning of February.

"France is one of the most important countries for Huawei in improving its European layout, with the leading population and economic level in Europe. Products are made in Europe and employees are also European, which can reduce users' concerns about the safety of Huawei products," said Xiang.

As a global company, Huawei insists on allocating resources on a global scale and providing customers with high-quality products.

France is one of the world's high-end manufacturing centers, with mature industrial infrastructure, a superior geographical location and a high-quality labor force, said Huawei. Huawei hopes to integrate the country’s capability into the firm’s overall value chain in Europe, improving the punctuality and reliability of customer delivery in Europe.

Huawei has been in Europe for 20 years, employing more than 12,000 people and directly or indirectly creating nearly 170,000 jobs.

https://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1181081.shtml
 
Indus OS’s App Bazaar could rest Huawei’s app concerns in India
By Aakash Jhaveri 26 minutes ago

DeS5FCKZaVDpKnM8fo3CtZ-650-80.jpg

Huawei is said to be in the advanced stage of a deal with IndusOS to act as a replacement to Google Media Service (GMS), which it is forbidden to use.

App Bazaar by Indus OS is one of the biggest alternate app stores in India, with over 60 million users. It has a selection of over 4,00,000 apps in regional languages and is also the fastest-growing content marketplace. It also offers options such as custom targetting and monetization to developers.

It isn’t Huawei’s first step in reducing its reliance on Google services. Just a month ago, news broke out that it will be partnering with Xiaomi and the BBK group to create a Play store alternative of sorts. Named as the Global Developer Service Alliance, it will be creating a new space for developers to offer their apps, games, movies, music, and other services.

The top 150 Indian app developers are also being brought on board for its app store, called the Huawei Media Services, with incentives going all the way up to $17,000.

Huawei, as well as Honor, have slowed down globally, with the Indian market yet to see any of the new smartphones that were launched after the trade ban implications came into place. With time against it, a partnership with Indus OS might just be the patch Huawei needed to get back in the race.
 
Russia's Sberbank Partners With China's Huawei on Cloud Services
16 hours ago

SberCloud, the cloud platform of Sberbank Group, and Huawei, the leading global provider of information and communication solutions, have agreed on strategic partnership that will provide access to SberCloud.Advanced for Russian and foreign users.

This is the first partnership on this scale between Russian and international cloud providers. The cloud platform will help to introduce a new line of basic (IaaS) and high-level (PaaS) cloud services on the Russian market. Thereby, SberCloud clients will be able to create IT infrastructure of any complexity in the cloud, work with big data clusters, manage cloud containerization, and automatically create, scale and manage apps.

SberCloud.Advanced users will have access to 37 cloud services. The launch of the new platform provides opportunities that were previously inaccessible to both cloud app developers and their users. The product is unique on the Russian market, as it is fully functional. SberCloud clients will get all necessary services integrated with each other in one company.

SberCloud.Advanced meets the highest business standards, functions under the Russian legislation and is placed in SberCloud infrastructure. The platform is focused on large, medium-sized and small businesses, as well as small startups.

The presented services are one of the most secure and advance cloud solutions in the world which are highly appreciated in China, Germany, France, Brazil, South Africa and other European, Asian, South African and African countries.

Yevgeny Kolbin, SberCloud CEO,

“The uniqueness of the SberCloud.Advanced product on the Russian market is its focus on supporting native cloud applications based on the microservices architecture. This exclusive offer on the market consists of interrelated cloud service, complementing each other, which provides clients with a unified convenient approach of using these services, diversity of most updated IT platforms, as well as a wide product range and most advanced IaaS/PaaS solutions on the Russian market. The target audience of SberCloud is the B2B market, from large business of small startups.”

Wang Wei, CEO, Huawei Cloud in Russia,

“We highly appreciate cooperation with Sberbank which is now one of leading companies in Russia which introduce innovation solutions. This partnership is really important on the Russian cloud service market. Huawei provides SberCloud with not only most progressive comprehensive cloud technology, but also transfer international expertise. We are sure that businesspersons will appreciate this solution and it will become a great contribution to the digital transformation of Russia.”
 
Huawei-MateBook-13-and-MateBook-14-2020.png

So, I'm the only one that noticed this... The Huawei Matebook 14 2020 is almost the same as the 2019 version. Both come with a display resolution of 2160x1440. What's so special about 2160x1440? It's what u get by taking 1920 and multiply it by 9/8. In essence 1920 (an eight) going to 2160 (a nine). China loves this number 9. The Emperors of the past used it. Even the PLA 81 adds to a 9. Also if u add up 2160 and 1440 they both reduce to 9. I noticed that Huawei is the only company that does this, play around with the numbers 8 and 9. Even their logo is an eight petal flower (eight around 1/and the whole makes nine).

So, what does everyone make of this? Is a laptop with a unique resolution of 2160x1440 brilliance or madness?

(BTW, if anyone were to ask me I'd say it borders on madness for these 3 reasons:

1. When u watch a 1920x1080p movie the image size will be small close to 13" or it becomes blurry if u attempt to stretch it full screen.

2. The last time someone tried taking 8->9 it was a laptop with 1440x900 resolution (1280 x 9/8). It was weird and no one really implemented it.

3. China is way too obsessed with Emperors (the everlasting 9). Makes me wanna puke every time I watch a Chinese drama like Ever Night. There's always an Emperor in every Chinese drama, or it's always about the Imperial family...)
 
Last edited:
Huawei P40 review

Introduction

The compact flagship - it's a niche fewer dare to explore, no matter potential or demand. Sony has given up on the Compact series, unfortunately, and the iPhone SE 2 is in a Schrödinger's state of uncertainty for all we know. But Huawei P40 is already here, already available worldwide, and it brings a ton of premium perks stuffed into a pocket-friendly body.

gsmarena_025.jpg

The P40 is the smallest and least expensive of the new P40 series trio by Huawei. It relies on a more reasonably sized 6.1" OLED screen, although 60Hz instead of 90Hz, with similar sharpness and boasts Huawei's top-of-the-line Kirin 990 5G chip. The screen vibrates to make sound just like on the other P40's, and the under-display fingerprint scanner is of equal rapidity and accuracy.

Being a (P)hotography-centric smartphone, the P40 also offers some of the key camera features found on its Pro siblings like the new 50MP main shooter, complete with the RYYB filter, OIS, and 4K at 60fps capturing. The zoom range is limited to 3x as there is no periscope lens, while the ultrawide shooter uses a more mainstream 16MP sensor vs. 40MP on the Pro. There is no fourth (ToF) camera on the back of the P40 as there is on the Pro.

gsmarena_018.jpg


The selfie camera enjoys the high-res 32MP sensor available on the Pro models, but it omits autofocus and we were really bummed to find this. At least it got the IR camera helper, so Face Unlock is possible.

The P40 is a smaller phone and it has a smaller 3,800 mAh battery. Its charging speed isn't as impressive at 22.5W, but still fast enough. There are no wireless charging capabilities on the P40 though, which is yet another obvious difference from the Pros.

Huawei P40 specs
  • Body: Glass front and back, aluminum frame; IP53-rated for dust and splash resistance.
  • Screen: 6.1" OLED, 1,080x2,340px resolution (422ppi); 60Hz refresh rate; HDR10.
  • Chipset: Kirin 990 5G, octa-core processor (2xA76 @2.86GHz + 2xA76 @2.36GHz +4xA55 @1.95GHz), Mali-G76 MP16 GPU, tri-core NPU.
  • Memory: 6/8GB RAM, 128/256GB UFS3.0 storage (expandable via Nano Memory - hybrid slot).
  • OS/Software: Android 10, EMUI 10.1.
  • Rear camera: Primary: 50MP (RYYB filter), 1/1.28" sensor size, 23mm f/1.8 lens, OIS, PDAF; Telephoto: 8MP 80mm f/2.4, OIS, 3x optical and 5x hybrid zoom, PDAF; Ultrawide angle: 16MP, 17mm, f/2.2, AF; 4K@60fps video capture; Leica co-developed.
  • Front camera: 32MP, f/2.0, 26mm; 3D IR camera.
  • Battery: 3,800mAh; Super Charge 22.5W.
  • Security: Fingerprint reader (under display, optical), 3D face recognition.
  • Connectivity: 5G/4G/3G/GSM; Dual SIM, Wi-Fi 6+, Dual-band GPS, Bluetooth 5.1 + LE, NFC, USB Type-C.
  • Misc: Acoustic display acts as earpiece, bottom-firing loudspeaker.
Well, besides the lower screen refresh rate, reworked secondary cameras and slower charging, the Huawei P40 has one more thing different the more premium Pro versions - it is only splash-proof with IP53 rating, instead of water-resistant with IP68 or similar. This has been an ongoing thing with Huawei's flagships for years now and we dream for the day where Pro and non-Pro headliners will have feature parity.

Enough with the small talk, here comes the P40 out of its box.

Unboxing the Huawei P40
The Huawei P40 retail bundle is flagship worthy. Inside the white paper box, you will find Huawei's 22.5W Super Charge brick and the enhanced USB-C cable needed for the Super Charge to work.

Huawei also ships the P40 with its wired EarBuds ending on a USB-C plug. There is no 3.5mm adapter inside the box.

gsmarena_006.jpg


Some markets may also get a transparent silicone case within the box, but we did not receive one.

Design and handling
Huawei P40 looks a lot like the Pro models, or that's what we first thought. Gone are the premium curves around the screen and it's noticeably smaller. And these might be good news for many.

gsmarena_028.jpg
Huawei P40 Pro next to Huawei P40
The P40 Pro is advertised for its quad-curved dual-glass design, but the P40 has no slopes on its screen edges. And that's doing wonders for the grip, as well as the mistouch prevention. Don't you worry though, fans of the curves, the back is still trendily bent towards the aluminum frame - as Huawei likes to call it - overflowing.

gsmarena_029.jpg
Huawei P40 Pro next to Huawei P40
One thing that's completely missing on the P40 is water-tightness of the shell. The P40 is only IP53 rated for medium dust resistance and light splashes. It's better than nothing, but whenever this ingress segmentation of the Huawei's flagship models ends, it'll still be late.

So, the front has the 6.1" OLED screen with elliptical punch-hole and rounded corners. It's still mind-boggling that we now call the 6.1-inchers compact, but the bezel-less era surely helped reduce the overall footprint and thus leave space for more pixels. And thanks to this smaller OLED, the P40 is indeed one reasonably compact smartphone.

gsmarena_013.jpg

The screen is of extended 1080p resolution, but thanks to the smaller panel size, the picture is quite sharp at 422ppi. The glass on top of it is of unknown origin, but Huawei has been using some sort of strengthened glass for a while now.

gsmarena_019.jpg

Unfortunately, Huawei has chosen not to bring 90Hz refresh rate on the P40 display and it's limited to 60Hz, which is so 2019. But with 2020 about to be cancelled, and more importantly - not everyone being able to notice the difference between 90Hz and 60Hz, we can understand Huawei's reasons not to push for 90Hz across the entire series.

Another thing that didn't make it on the P40 is the autofocus for the selfie camera. It's still 32MP and it still has an IR camera, so more secure face unlock is available.

Just like on the P30 Pro and P40 Pro, the display doubles as an earpiece. It vibrates to produce sound in voice calls and the sound is great. Unfortunately, it can't double as a speaker, hence there are no stereo speakers on either of the P40 phones.

gsmarena_004.jpg

The under-display fingerprint reader is superb - it is among the fastest available on the market, with excellent accuracy and reliability. It has 30% larger scanning area than the P30 generation and works noticeably faster and easier.

The back is where the photography magic is happening and the volcano-like protruding setup houses all essential hardware. Here you can see, left to right, the 16MP ultrawide, the 50MP primary, and the 8MP tele snappers. A dual-tone flash us below, but there is no fourth camera for depth purposes.

gsmarena_016.jpg

Huawei has designed the P40s backs to mimic a certain look of the flat point-and-shoot cameras from a not-so-distant era. And it surely works great for the P40. It comes with a price though - the phone wobbles a lot when used on a flat desk or table.

gsmarena_008.jpg

Anyway, once you are past the camera - you can enjoy one really nice view of Deep-Sea Blue - Huawei really knows how to make a captivating paint without it being over the top. The shade changes depending on the reflection, but the change is subtle and makes for a good, relaxing effect as opposed to, say, disco lights.

gsmarena_022.jpg

The Deep-Sea Blue, Black, and Ice White version are with the familiar glossy finish - meaning they are shiny and slippery. Huawei is also selling alternative matt models in Silver Frost and Blush Gold - so, if grip is important (it is), and you want a break from the polished panels, we strongly recommend the matt ones.

gsmarena_021.jpg

Huawei P40 has a metal frame, reasonably sized and shaped. It is enough to provide for a proper grip, even if it isn't ideal. The matt versions should do better in this aspect, of course.

gsmarena_010.jpg

Around the frame you'll see the volume and power keys on the right, while the bottom has everything else - SIM tray, USB-C port, mouthpiece, and speaker.

gsmarena_009.jpg

The P40 spreads at 148.9 x 71.1 x 8.5 mm - only 5mm taller than the iPhone 11 Pro. The P40 weighs 175 grams, which is about 13g lighter than the iPhone. The P40 is indeed a (2020) pocket-sized smartphone.

gsmarena_032.jpg

iPhone 11 Pro next to the Huawei P40

Handling the Huawei P40 is a flagship experience - just as most of the recent glass smartphones. The size is a nice break from the traditional large screen flagships, and the matt versions are appreciated for the grip. The one thing we do miss is the proper ingress protection - everything else is simply great with the P40.

https://www.gsmarena.com/huawei_p40-review-2096p2.php
 
I just wanna say, the only reason the PLA hasn't taken back Taiwan is coz of the much needed semiconductors industry. The moment US bans TMSC from supplying Huawei, China no longer needs Taiwan and will take it back by force. US strategists r dumb planners playing with fire. The same dumb minds thought they could win Korean and Vietnam and now "Huawei war". The added bonus is once Taiwan is taken back, it will cause a chain reaction. US will lose Okinawa next, then SK/JP, then Guam. US had always been a 2nd rate strategist, might bcome 3rd rate if they continue to attack Huawei.
 
Huawei Ranks No.1 in 2019 Data Center Interconnect Market Share Outside of North America


Apr 03, 2020


[Shenzhen, China, April 3, 2020] Omdia, a leading market research institute, recently released analysis of 2019 Data Center Interconnect (DCI) vendor market shares. Based on this latest Omdia data, Huawei calculates its market share of all-optical DCI equipment (Huawei DC OptiX) across the three regions excluding North America to be 32.6%, representing the largest market share among global DCI manufacturers.

According to Omdia analysis, total revenue of the global DCI market reached US$3.7 billion in 2019, with a year-on-year growth of 4.4%. The DCI revenue from the North American market declined by 2.1%, whereas that from the other markets that compose the global total rose by 8.9%. The growth of the global DCI market came largely from regions such as Europe and Asia Pacific.

With the rapid development of big data, cloud computing, and mobile Internet, traffic between data centers is surging. An increasing number of enterprises opt to build their own data centers, making data centers a global investment hotspot. As the scale of data center construction continues to increase year by year, enterprises are facing the challenges of high DCI costs and difficult management of multiple data centers. They urgently need ultra-broadband, simplified, and intelligent DCI networks to cope with numerous data flows in the cloud era and achieve service agility while reducing network investment costs.

In response to the DCI challenges, Huawei has focused on R&D and continuous innovations to reshape conventional optical transmission devices in data centers from three dimensions: lower transmission cost, fast deployment, and simplified O&M. Huawei delivers an industry-leading single-fiber transmission capacity to constantly reduce the per-bit transmission cost and maximize the value of fibers. Moreover, fiber connections and configurations are simplified to achieve fast deployment, helping customers accelerate service rollout. Huawei also introduces intelligent O&M features such as proactive detection and warning of fiber and optical-layer faults to simplify O&M.

At HUAWEI CONNECT 2019, Huawei unveiled the industry's first intelligent DCI product, Huawei OptiXtrans DC908, further consolidating its leading position in the DCI market. Designed specifically for the enterprise market, this product delivers ultra-high bandwidth, supports smooth upgrade to 88T per fiber, and allows flexible selection of single-wavelength 100G to 800G, meeting enterprises' bandwidth requirements over the next 10 years as well as helping enterprises recoup investment. Intelligent software functions are introduced to simplify deployment, reducing the device commissioning workload, shortening the deployment time to 8 minutes, and lowering the skill requirements of operators. Additionally, this product can predict fiber faults and accurately diagnose faults within a short time, achieving intelligent O&M.

By the end of 2019, Huawei DC OptiX series products have been deployed for over 120 key industry customers in over 60 countries around the world. For more information, please visit https://e.huawei.com/en/solutions/enterprise-transmission-access/data-center-interconnect

https://www.huawei.com/en/press-events/news/2020/4/data-center-interconnect-market
 
I just wanna say, the only reason the PLA hasn't taken back Taiwan is coz of the much needed semiconductors industry. The moment US bans TMSC from supplying Huawei, China no longer needs Taiwan and will take it back by force. US strategists r dumb planners playing with fire. The same dumb minds thought they could win Korean and Vietnam and now "Huawei war". The added bonus is once Taiwan is taken back, it will cause a chain reaction. US will lose Okinawa next, then SK/JP, then Guam. US had always been a 2nd rate strategist, might bcome 3rd rate if they continue to attack Huawei.
We fought 2 superpowers when they had nukes and we had none. Don't test us.
 
Huawei Mulls Moving Chip Production to Mainland China to Curb Possible New US Restrictions – Report

13:47 GMT 16.04.2020
by Oleg Burunov

In early April, Huawei chairman Eric Xu warned Beijing “would not sit there and watch” the Chinese tech giant “being slaughtered” if Washington introduced new chip-related restrictions against the company.

Huawei has started to gradually shift the production of chips away from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC) to Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), in anticipation of additional US restrictions, Reuters quoted unnamed sources as saying on Thursday.

One of the sources claimed that Huawei’s chip unit HiSilicon, had begun to urge some of its engineers to design for SMIC rather than TSMC in late 2019.

“Before, Huawei wanted to work with top notch manufacturers, and SMIC was just second-tier. We are now moving resources to SMIC to speed up our help to them”, the source added.
They also described the shift as “common industry practice”, adding that the Chinese tech giant “considers carefully issues such as capacity, technology, and delivery when choosing semiconductor fabrication plants”.

The remarks come after the company’s chairman Eric Xu warned that the Chinese government “would not sit there and watch Huawei being slaughtered” if Washington slapped new chip-related restrictions on the firm. According to him, “there would be countermeasures”.
Earlier, the US media reported that senior US officials had agreed to new restrictions requiring companies doing business with Huawei to obtain licenses before selling chips using US-made chip-making technology or software.

The measures, if adopted, are understood to target TSMC, a major chip supplier to HiSilicon.

The US began a sanctions campaign against Huawei in 2019, accusing the company of cooperating with the Chinese intelligence services, allegations that the firm denies.

Washington's measures so far have included restrictions such as prohibiting Google from installing its popular Android operating system on new models of Huawei’s smartphones. The tech giant, meanwhile, last month reported that despite US pressure, its revenues have grown by over 19 percent year-on-year, with sales topping $123 billion and net profits reaching $9 billion.

https://sputniknews.com/business/20...to-curb-possible-new-us-restrictions--report/

This move was long overdue, but better late than never.
 
Huawei Mulls Moving Chip Production to Mainland China to Curb Possible New US Restrictions – Report

13:47 GMT 16.04.2020
by Oleg Burunov

In early April, Huawei chairman Eric Xu warned Beijing “would not sit there and watch” the Chinese tech giant “being slaughtered” if Washington introduced new chip-related restrictions against the company.

Huawei has started to gradually shift the production of chips away from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC) to Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), in anticipation of additional US restrictions, Reuters quoted unnamed sources as saying on Thursday.

One of the sources claimed that Huawei’s chip unit HiSilicon, had begun to urge some of its engineers to design for SMIC rather than TSMC in late 2019.

“Before, Huawei wanted to work with top notch manufacturers, and SMIC was just second-tier. We are now moving resources to SMIC to speed up our help to them”, the source added.
They also described the shift as “common industry practice”, adding that the Chinese tech giant “considers carefully issues such as capacity, technology, and delivery when choosing semiconductor fabrication plants”.

The remarks come after the company’s chairman Eric Xu warned that the Chinese government “would not sit there and watch Huawei being slaughtered” if Washington slapped new chip-related restrictions on the firm. According to him, “there would be countermeasures”.
Earlier, the US media reported that senior US officials had agreed to new restrictions requiring companies doing business with Huawei to obtain licenses before selling chips using US-made chip-making technology or software.

The measures, if adopted, are understood to target TSMC, a major chip supplier to HiSilicon.

The US began a sanctions campaign against Huawei in 2019, accusing the company of cooperating with the Chinese intelligence services, allegations that the firm denies.

Washington's measures so far have included restrictions such as prohibiting Google from installing its popular Android operating system on new models of Huawei’s smartphones. The tech giant, meanwhile, last month reported that despite US pressure, its revenues have grown by over 19 percent year-on-year, with sales topping $123 billion and net profits reaching $9 billion.

https://sputniknews.com/business/20...to-curb-possible-new-us-restrictions--report/

This move was long overdue, but better late than never.
We had been to open to foreign tech at the expense of local companies. Chinese government only encouraged local tech of it was strategic and military related but private companies were free to choose. Now they understand why companies must be patriotic and help each other. This will be a good lesson for HUAWEI and ZTE.
 
Huawei's Outdoor CPE Lite Wins Red Dot Award: Product Design 2020

Apr 20, 2020


[Shenzhen, China, April 20, 2020] Huawei's outdoor CPE Lite won the Red Dot Award: Product Design 2020 for its high-quality design, high integration, and simple and intuitive installation experience.

It is the second time in a row that Huawei outdoor CPE products have won this prestigious award, which is widely regarded as the "Oscar" of the design industry. This demonstrates the unwavering pursuit of Huawei's outdoor CPE family in achieving a high quality and user-friendly design that enables perfect adaptation into its surrounding environments, as well as strong R&D commitment.


2020420.jpg



CPE Lite is Huawei's latest mini customer premises equipment (CPE) designed for outdoor network scenarios. It enables cost-effective high-speed wireless access in a very compact form factor.

On top of its minimal, elegant notepad-sized appearance, the tensile build allows for excellent flexibility and adaptability, enabling it to perfectly blend in with modern urban environments. The miniaturized design encases tiny high-gain antennas and boasts highly efficient heat dissipation capabilities.

A floating ground design is also adopted to eliminate additional grounding and facilitate plug-and-play functionality, further enhancing industry-leading simplicity. In addition, new universal mounting brackets allow users to install the product on walls, poles, windows, or glass surfaces in just a few easy steps. This can be done without a professional installer, ensuring a simpler, more intuitive installation experience.

CPE Lite incorporates low-profile, directional, and dual-polarized antenna technology that provides a high gain and supports 4R transmission and FDD/TDD full bandwidth. This also enables the product to come in small dimensions while delivering high performance. An excellent anti-interference capability is further achieved to ensure high spectral efficiency in complex channel environments. Combined with these innovative designs, CPE Lite is a powerful tool to provide users with stable and high-speed network experience.

Zhang Yiqu, Head of WTTx Domain, said: "We are honored to receive the industry's recognition of Huawei's CPE Lite. It represents another innovation in miniaturization, user self-installation, and premium performance of Huawei's outdoor CPE family. This CPE provides stronger signals than its indoor counterparts and allows for a peak throughput of up to 600 Mbps. It eliminates the need for a professional installer, significantly improving the service provisioning efficiency. We are confident that CPE Lite will complete Huawei's outdoor and indoor CPE family, helping operators promote home broadband services and achieve business success."

About Red Dot Award

The Red Dot Design Award was established by Design Zentrum Nordrhein Westfalen, the most prestigious German design association in Europe, in Essen, Germany in 1955. It is the most authoritative design award in the global industrial design industry. It is also the greatest honor in design for Apple, IBM, Porsche, and other top international companies to compete for every year. The award is known for its strict selection criteria and it consists of three awards: Product Design Award, Communication Design Award, and Design Concept Award. The entries must have innovative features that differ themselves from other similar products and represent the world's highest industrial design level in the field.

https://www.huawei.com/en/press-events/news/2020/4/outdoor-cpe-lite-wins-red-dot-award
 
Back
Top Bottom