Almost everything uses legacy nodes. Specially military applications, they prefer mature and proven fabrication processes.
I just started playing Tears of the Kingdom, it will take me a year before I am done with it. But I always welcome more top-down Zelda games. I like that I can get both Zelda styles on one device.
Heartwarming 🥹
If it works why change it? The 747 is not long for this world anyways.
How is mainstream Linux distro support?
Even if HarmonyOS doesn’t see much usage outside of China/East Asia, it is still a good thing to see Android and iOS usage reduced somewhere.
The real derisking
I hope this goes into production soon.
Another “Sorry we didn’t know it was invisible” moment
ASML will be missing out on a lot of Chinese sales, this ought to hurt its R&D budget.
GCC states get demonized for the treatment of migrant workers and a lot of it is justified. But at least all of them are moving to have heat protection laws in place!
https://www.newarab.com/news/qatar-takes-action-protect-workers-extreme-heat
This was a good post, thank you
The days of the US withholding technology to bully the rest of the world into submission are over.
That’s where it gets interesting. It uses multiple kernels depending on the version, one of the kernels is Linux but they also have their own kernel.
The software will mature overtime. MooreThreads just needs to be good enough for now. It can sell to all the peoples and organizations that for one reason or another cannot buy from Nvidia and other US-based vendors.
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.
I think they are going with their own micro kernel design. But they also use Linux on some versions.
They took the Google route. There’s OpenHarmony and then there’s HarmonyOS with Huawei branding and services.
I’m not an expert, I learned this off of Wikipedia
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.
And using Chinese 5G technology