Recently though, several factors have pushed Huawei, China’s leading technology manufacturer, to begin developing its own OS – Harmony OS . The recent controversy between the US and China that took place in mid-May 2019, has also forced Google to pull Huawei’s license to use Android, the open-source OS, a version of which most manufacturers except Apple use on their devices.
To broadly summarize, the US and China, the world’s two largest national economies, have had an ongoing trade war. In 2018, US President Donald Trump raised import taxes on technology (laptops, smartphones, smart TVs, etc.) coming to the United States from China. This decreases US goods being built in China as he believes this to be an “unfair trade practice,” where some of the biggest American corporations rely on China building their products instead of having them built back home. This also means that Trump wants to keep manufacturing jobs in the US instead of China.
In mid-May 2019, following an executive order from Trump, the US Department of Commerce Bureau of Industry and Security Entity List added Huawei on its blacklist. This means that Huawei is not allowed to use any form of American components, technology, software, or chips into any of its technologies. If you think about it, it’s quite natural that Trump would take this decision following the trade war. But another reason Trump took this decision was because he had a reason to believe that Huawei was a security threat on the US due the telecom giant’s closeness with the Chinese government.
Huawei’s vice-president of communications, Joe Kelly spoke to Reuters at the heat of this news and said, “We are very open and transparent. In the US-China trade war we have become a bargaining chip.”
And now Huawei has unveiled its new OS, Harmony OS.