Huawei denies rumor that it will bring back its Kirin SoC for the P60 series in 2023
In 2020, exactly one year to the day that the U.S. put Huawei on the Entity List the U.S. Commerce Department issued a new export rule change dealing with chips. The new rule prevents foundries using American technology from shipping chips to Huawei. Even the latter’s own Kirin chips, designed by the company’s HiSilicon semiconductor unit, could not be shipped to the company because of the new export rules.
Qualcomm received permission from the U.S. to ship 4G versions of its latest chipset to Huawei
Eventually, Huawei went through its inventory of Kirin chips and the U.S. gave Qualcomm permission to supply the company with its powerful Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 chips, but these are made to work with 4G signals. Yes, the recently released Mate 50 and Mate 50 Pro are powered with these chipsets which means no 5G connectivity, but there is a way around this. A company called Soyealink is selling a case for the Mate 50 series that will allow the phones to connect to 5G signals.
Huawei’s Kirin chips were always thought highly of by phone enthusiasts
Huawei made lemonade out of lemons
But Huawei has made lemonade from the lemons it received and while the firm is no longer on the heels of Apple and Samsung at the top of the league tables, and has sold off its Honor sub-unit, it still has developed a viable operating system (Harmony 3.0 is pre-installed on the Mate 50 series) and a wildly successful ecosystem. One thing you can say about Huawei is that it did not roll over and play dead just because the U.S. wanted it to.
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