Earlier this year, we learned that Huawei’s homegrown HarmonyOS 2.0 amounted to little more than a poorly-disguised Android 10 clone, despite the company’s insistence that it was a new and radically different operating system that would be able to fit a variety of computing scenarios.
For the past years, the Chinese company has been navigating the trade war between its home country and the US, and this has had a profound impact on its ability to develop new hardware. To mitigate the problem, the company has been pivoting towards cloud and software services, while also pooling more resources towards Harmony OS.
According to Huawei’s Twitter, the company will host an event on June 2 where it will formally launch Harmony OS on smartphones. The first phone to launch with the new operating system is the Huawei Mate 40 Pro, and the company is expected to showcase two new MatePad tablets and two new smartwatches — all running Harmony OS 2.0.
Huawei has big plans for the new OS as it remains optimistic about the future. In a recent memo sent to company staff, founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei encouraged employees to “dare to lead the world in software,” as development in that area is “outside of US control and we will have greater independence and autonomy.”
With Harmony OS 2.0, Huawei is supposedly making a huge investment in developing an entire ecosystem, and has already forged partnerships with 20 hardware vendors and 280 app developers.