I imagine their goal is to not be reliant on Google ecosystem though. That means providing their own set of services and their own app store. So, they'd have to go through the exercise of updating existing apps for that. Breaking compatibility might just mean switching out gservices.
I use the huawei app gallery rn even on another device, and my huawei watch requires a huawei services background app, similar to google play services.
Xiaomi also released their own fork of Android recently on HyperOS, it is still built on Android AOSP without google elements. Seems like thats the way going forward.
I think that's the most sensible approach, there's little value in reinventing the wheel here. The main goal is to make sure that the tech stack is owned and manged domestically, so ripping out any Google dependent bits is the key task.
That's kind of what almost all android distros are (except that most don't remove google play services) ... samsung's OneUI, Xiaomi's current MIUI, Huawei's HarmonyOS, just skinned AOSP with some added features.
I remember when people would import the iPhone before it was launched here. Maybe someone can get you a Huawei. I don’t know how strict your government is about unlicensed devices being sold between private citizens. But there’s a risk that it may not be compatible with the networks in your country.
What exactly is it? They're shipping Linux laptops now. Is this a Linux phone or does "break from Android" mean "It's using an Android fork like last year but this year they aren't mentioning Android in the press release"?
No, so far as I understand it it's a separate system that may not be compatible with android. HarmonyOS is intended to be a cross platform operating system from the ground up linking phone, car (electronic vehicles growing exponentially in China), desktop, household electronics, household AI, etc, completely seamlessly. If you aren't part of that entire ecosystem as Huawei visualize, which is likely the case if you're not in China, you probably won't experience the benefit of HarmonyOS, it'll just be another system running another set of apps. But ppl in China will if it rolls out as intended.
Outside of China, HarmonyOS will probably eventually need to be compatible with Android to be competitive.
And this is a third Harmony OS, separate from their Linux distro and Android version? Because both of those were called Harmony OS too and did iOS style inter-device communication.
My understanding is that it's an Android fork, and at this point it's diverged enough that it doesn't work with stock Android apps. Another break from Android is that Huawei has their own service ecosystem and app store that's independent of Google.
I don't think I fully understand what it even after reading the Wikipedia article. But it seems to me like there are different OSes by Huawei that share the same name. I think it started out as another AOSP distribution but Huawei gradually replaced the kernel and other layers with its own designs. And judging from the title they are now independent of AOSP.
OS family Unix-like (modified AOSP), LiteOS, OpenHarmony until HarmonyOS NEXT
Of course all these technicalities don't matter. What matters is the apps and services. If I get a chance to try it I will share my thoughts.
I think that's right, they started with AOSP, but now I guess it's diverged enough that it's no longer compatible with stock Android apps. So, it's going to be its own ecosystem going forward. I agree that what the users ultimately care about are the apps and services, but it's incredibly important for Huawei to ensure they control the whole stack and have their own distribution mechanisms that are independent of US companies.
Not only is it not Linux, but the operating system is closed source: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/HarmonyOS. According to the article it's built on top of "OpenHarmony," but that does little to assuage my disappointment.
Yes, in that it uses the Linux Kernel. It's not typically considered a Linux distribution because most everything else in the OS is custom and Google-suffused. In particular Android lacks GNU libraries and tools.