The US tried to erase Huawei from the map. Huawei has something to say to you: “thank you”

The United States has been trying to put Huawei offside for five years. Well, although it started with Huaweithere has actually been a years-long trade war with China, which implies a escalation of tariffssanctions and blacklists for some companies. This means that public organizations cannot use technology from these companies (although later they skip it to the bullfighter) and that both American and some European companies cannot make deals with China if this means putting the security of the United States at risk. Concrete examples: Nvidia could not sell its best AI chips in China and the European ASML cannot sell its best advanced photolithography machines to Chinese foundries. The objective was condemn Chinese companies and its technology to ostracism, but it turns out that the opposite has happened and the current pHuawei resident has a message for the United States. Thank you. Huawei and the technological boost thanks to the United States Before continuing with the context, because there is a lot to tell, let’s get to the chicha. Recently, within the framework of the IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems held in Shanghai, Huawei presented its technological roadmap. Not one focused on the product, but on the chips, on their ambitions and on their new technologies. At one point during the event, Xu Zhijun (current president of the Chinese company) stood on stage to thank publicly the tight control that the United States has exercised over the West’s commercial and diplomatic channels with China in recent years. The most notable thing about the presentation is Huawei’s plans to manufacture chips with a density similar to those of 1.4 nanometersbut without the necessary machinery to do so. As we say, ASML cannot sell the most advanced machines to Chinese companies, so companies like SMIC or Huawei itself They are managing to stay in the technological race. They use strategies such as “impressions” of many layers on the wafers or, directly, reverse engineering, and Huawei has something they have called ‘Tau Scaling Law’. Instead of going the traditional route by making transistors physically smaller to achieve denser chips by miniaturizing components, what they are developing is a method to reduce the travel time of signals within the chips. That is, the chips do not have physically smaller components, but thanks to the reduction of internal ‘wiring’ and latency, the density of the transistors will be similar to that of chips made with extreme ultraviolet lithography equipment. It is an extremely complicated path to achieve results that can be similar and, in essence, a sample of all the turns that the company must take because they cannot access those ASML SVU machines. However, it’s also something Huawei (and the Chinese industry, in general) is grateful for. Literally. As I say, at one point during the presentation, Xu Zhijun commented that “if the United States had not put pressure on our country, we would not have achieved this,” crowning the phrase with a “we are grateful to them”. Because, in the end, exactly what Jensen Huang (CEO of Nvidia) and other industry experts warned a long time ago has happened: sanctions were not going to work not to stop the Chinese technology sector, but also to find tools and alternatives to boost their industry in record time. These measures include the aforementioned reverse technology or Huawei’s new LogicFolding architecture to much more conventional ones like that of buy smuggling technology or industrial espionage. What Huang pointed out a few months ago was that Nvidia (and the United States) could not miss the opportunity to be in China. “If the United States had not pressured our country, we would not have achieved this. We are grateful to them” Because China was going to find a way to catch up and compete with the United States, but if they were put under increasing pressure, the effort was going to be greater and, furthermore, they were not going to be able to take advantage of selling technology until then. This is why Nvidia got permission to sell their H200 GPUs (with 25% tariffs) to China not so long ago, something that came too latewhen China seems to no longer need them. Either way, Huawei is expected to start selling Kirin chips (the ones inside its phones) built with this new technology before the end of 2026. The company aims toSimilar density to traditional 3nm noteswith the goal of reaching that equivalence with 1.4nm chips by 2031. In fact, they point that in recent years they have already been manufacturing chips using this approach on a trial basis, but it is now that the trial has been opened. We will also have to wait for technological analyzes by third parties to see if Huawei’s claims are correct, of course. What is undeniable is that, whether the figures used by Huawei are true or not, China has technological sovereignty between its eyebrows. And its latest five-year plan is a declaration of intent to achieve superiority in the very short term. In Xataka | Tariffs have accelerated a trend in China: the aspirational thing is no longer to buy Apple, it is to buy Chinese brands

The European Commission wants to sweep Huawei off the map. Spain has told him not so quickly

The European Commission lhas been trying to expel Huawei for years of their telecommunications networks. And that intention wants to become a binding law, one that would exclude all Chinese teams within a period of 36 months. But there are two countries acting as a retaining wall: Spain and Germany. what’s happening. The European Commission wants to veto Huawei and ZTE citing security reasons. Through a review of the Cybersecurity Regulation, it proposes mandatory elimination of high-risk suppliers. The current draft establishes the mandatory recall of equipment provided by “high-risk suppliers”, assuming a formal veto for Chinese telecommunications companies. The Spain case. In Spain we have a problem with this intention. Telefónica renewed its 5G core contract with Huawei in 2024 and valid until 2030. As relevant information, this 5G core was renewed with the Chinese manufacturer for private equipment, but the contracts for government institutions and business services were awarded to Nokia. In other words, the most sensitive infrastructure is already in European hands. Vodafone –now controlled by Zegona–, maintains the majority of its network with Huawei technology, and although MásOrange has been reducing the presence of the Chinese brand in its equipment for some time (less than 40% in 2027). In short, Large Spanish operators have been using Huawei equipment for years despite the EU’s warnings, and they do not seem willing to simply sweep it off the map. The German case. Something similar happens in Germany. Huawei is still present in more than 60% of the country’s antennas, and although progressive withdrawal plans are already underway, the schedule imposed by Brussels does not seem realistic. Fighting tooth and nail. Both countries have warned the Commission of their concerns in this regard: vetoing China from the European network infrastructure may provoke retaliation, in addition to making the deployment of the network significantly more expensive.to artificial intelligence infrastructure which Europe has been dreaming of for a year and a half. The EU Council requires a majority to approve this plan, so Spain and Germany can look for allies to try to stop it. This would allow the process to be delayed, require modifications and exceptions in the draft, or even end the proposal if it fails to move forward. The possible outcome. With such fierce opposition, the most likely outcome is that there will be no victory for anyone. Spain and Germany may knock down the proposal completely, but they do have enough muscle to deform it. It seems inevitable that, sooner or later, Huawei will disappear from European telecommunications, but the deadlines will not be as immediate as Europe intends, nor is it ruled out that there will be specific exceptions if countries demand it. In Xataka | I tested four Huawei devices at once to evaluate their ecosystem: great hardware, lacks glue

Huawei has found a way to step on TSMC’s heels

The development of current semiconductor technology is deeply dependent on the size of the transistors that reside within the chips. TSMC, Intel, Samsung and other integrated circuit manufacturers they dedicate a lot of resources generation after generation of its technologies to the optimization and the miniaturization of its transistors. Even so, perfecting them is so difficult that sometimes they barely manage to improve them between two generations of consecutive integration technologies. That the chip industry depends so deeply on transistor size is a problem. Make them smaller it’s getting harderso the ideal is to undo this dependency as much as possible with a purpose: to ensure that the integration technologies developed by integrated circuit manufacturers continue to improve without being so profoundly limited by the physical characteristics of the transistors. This is precisely what Huawei has just achieved as part of the effort that China is making to ensure the development of its chip industry despite the pressure of US sanctions. He Tingbo, the president of the semiconductor business and director of the scientific committee of this company, has presented a new scaling law and a new chip architecture capable, on paper, of taking its semiconductors to a lithographic process node equivalent to 1.4 nm by 2031. Currently the most advanced integrated circuits that TSMC, Intel or Samsung produce are 2 nm. The “tau scaling law” promises He Tingbo made this announcement during his keynote address at the IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS 2026) in Shanghai, China, today. Huawei’s plan is to continue improving the performance and density of its chips despite restrictions that limit China’s access to the most advanced semiconductor manufacturing equipment. And the heart of their strategy is the “tau scaling law.” Tau is the time it takes for electrical signals to go from one transistor to another. Huawei’s bet is to reduce it to the maximum This principle seeks to reduce the time it takes for signals and data to travel through computer chips and equipment. According to He Tingbo, it proposes a paradigm shift that replaces the traditional geometric miniaturization of transistors. for a temporary escalation (τ), hence its name. It seems like a very complicated strategy, but it’s actually reasonably simple. We can easily understand what it is by referring to this example. Let’s imagine that we have a city (the chip) with many buildings (transistors) connected by roads (wires). Moore’s Law says: “make buildings smaller to fit more into the same space.” Huawei, however, proposes: “buildings can no longer be much smaller, so instead let’s make cars (electric signals) travel faster on the roads, and redesign the urban layout so that they travel less distance.” τ (tau) is, precisely, the time it takes a car to go from one building to another, and Huawei’s commitment is to reduce it as much as possible. Huawei’s LogicFolding architecture plays an essential role in this approach. And, if we continue with our example, it proposes a new design of the roads on which cars circulate, so that the chip will perform better without the need to build smaller buildings. Huawei has anticipated that its next generation of Kirin chips, which will arrive next fall, will be the first to implement the LogicFolding architecture. Image | TSMC More information | Reuters | SCMP In Xataka | The condemnation that afflicts China: after decades of manufacturing a competitive desktop processor, it is six years behind

A Huawei router was not supposed to need a whopping 12,000mAh. It was supposed

Earlier this month, Huawei held its HarmonyOS Smart Home event in China. An event in which, mainly, it presented to the world some of the home devices that it is preparing to continue advancing as a brand (mainly in China) during 2026. Among the devices presented, one of the most curious (and most covered) was the Huawei WiFi Xa very curious portable router with a gigantic 12,000mAh battery. What is. With its unusual X shape, the Huawei WiFi X is a portable, foldable router with an arrangement of 16 antennas that, according to the company, improves reception by 13% compared to conventional ones. It allows 5G connection and has been developed jointly by Huawei and China Mobile, supporting speeds of up to 5.3 Gbps download and 1 Gb upload. what else. Another of the key points of this router is its 1.8-inch screen, with OLED technology. This shows real-time information related to the battery level, number of connected devices, and is complemented and connected with the Huawei home app to be able to check this data from the phone. The Powerbank. This device has a gigantic 12,000mAh battery with 66W fast charging. Figures that are more reminiscent of a PowerBank than a wireless router. According to Huawei, it can transmit uninterruptedly for 20 hours, and with just 10 minutes of charging, for nine. Why is it important. Beyond the curiosity of the X design and the huge battery, Huawei boasts of being a benchmark in the WiFi 6 router industry. It has a system of four receiving antennas and four sending antennas (4×4 MIMO), low latency, and direct association with China Mobile, key in its native country. It also has interoperability with HarmonyOS. Huawei long ago left its system behind as a mobile-only solution, to create a complete software ecosystem that even powers routers. This is a device, in principle, aimed at China. However, the company has previously brought to Spain quite peculiar routers such as the Mesh X3 Pro system, a WiFi 7 with a theoretical speed of 3,570 Mbps and a 2×2 MIMO system. In Xataka | After six years of silent planning, Huawei is ready with its big move: dethroning NVIDIA

Huawei has been plotting a plan for six years and now they are ready to dethrone the undethroned: NVIDIA

With the beginning of the technological war between the United States and China, Huawei was given a mission: to become the spearhead of Chinese technology companies. After a tough first few years that were like a pilgrimage through the desert, the Chinese company has come back strong. Not only has it regained leadership in China, but it has taken steps to become the lever of the industry. Yes a few days ago presented its supercomputernow it’s time for something more modest, but essential in the AI ​​career. An inference chip that, they claim, is more powerful than the NVIDIA alternative. Atlas 350. Within the framework of the Annual Partners Conference, the company has once again introduce the Atlas 350 platform (already advertisement at Huawei Connect 2025 last September). This is a card that uses the latest version of its processor Atlas 950PR and which, according to the company’s data, has an improvement in inference performance of 2.8 times compared to the competition. That competition It’s the H20 chip, a trimmed version which was the one that NVIDIA had permission to sell in China. It is a platform focused on rapid data movement, which makes it ideal for a high workload in tasks such as search recommendations, multimodal generation and use of large-scale language models. It is an accelerator, in short, a piece of hardware dedicated to a very specific task, and it is what it knows how to do well within a server. to the mess. To train AI, China has other weapons, some from Huawei itself, but this Atlas 350 is to meet that goal of the Chinese industry of making AI tools accessible and monetizable as soon as possible. In fact, at the event it was confirmed that there are already partners launching servers built with the Atlas 350 as its heart. And here is the real relevant data. Huawei is not just presenting things: it is presenting and announcing that it already has partners launching products with this new technology. Because the idea is that each new piece of hardware begins to be distributed and deployed as soon as possible among Chinese companies that are within the ambitious five-year plan for technological sovereignty. Essential. For months now, the company has been moving to position itself as the lever for the rest of the Chinese technology network with NPUs, dissipation hardware, standard cards for AI, motherboards and “other different forms of hardware to facilitate the development of customers and partners.” At the event, they highlighted that “although the first half of the era of artificial intelligence focused on computing power, the second will be defined by data.” And it is in that inference where Huawei wants provide all your infrastructure to become an indispensable piece of the ecosystem. Because China, within the great future plan, is fighting to become a power not only of the AI ​​that we know, but of the physical artificial intelligencerobots or 6G networksa field in which Huawei also leads. Enough? That’s the big question, and the answer may not depend as much on raw power as it does on the ecosystem. I’m not talking about the rich ecosystem that Huawei is building, but rather the ecosystem of tools. If everyone uses NVIDIA cards for training (in the inference we see that little by little everyone is waging war on their own), it is for them that the software and processes are optimized. And the most leading Chinese companies they want NVIDIA hardware to be on par with or surpass American rivals. This has been a soap opera with NVIDIA pressuring Trump to let it sell the H200s in China, achieving it after 25% tariff for those purchases and then China sending contradictory messages. On March 31 there will be a meeting in Beijing between Trump and Xi Jinping and it is expected that export controls – and the issue of NVIDIA – will be put on the table. And someone who is going to be watching that meeting carefully is Huawei. Because China is at a crossroads right now: it knows that Your companies order NVIDIA chipsbut at the same time the Government does not want them to leverage themselves using foreign technology that could leave them stranded again. Images | Huawei In Xataka | The looming bottleneck in AI is neither RAM nor gas: it’s that TSMC’s N3 node is absolutely saturated

Yuanjie is the unknown Chinese photonics technology company whose shares have risen 780%. The surprise is who is behind it: Huawei

Yuanjie Semiconductor Technology It probably doesn’t sound familiar to you. And it’s completely normal. Until very recently, this Chinese company barely had visibility outside its domestic market, and even within it it played in the background compared to other giants in the sector. However, something has changed radically in the last year. Your actions They have risen nearly 780%a leap that has not only caught the attention of investors, but has placed its founder, Zhang Xingang, in the billionaires’ club. And there is a detail that adds another layer to the story: Huawei would be behind the company. So you may be wondering what exactly this company does. The key is not so much in Yuanjie itself as in the terrain on which he plays. Yuanjie makes laser chips that are used to transmit data in the form of light inside artificial intelligence-oriented data centers, a field that fits within the broader boom in photonics. It may sound technical, but the idea is quite direct: move more information, faster and with less consumption. As explained by PhotonDeltathis type of technology allows the use of photons to transmit and process information, in addition to integrating several photonic and optoelectronic functions in a single chip, with clear advantages over traditional electronics in high-demand environments. A movement that targets Huawei The other key point appears when you look at who is behind. Forbes presents to Yuanjie as a company backed by Huaweia connection that adds another dimension to their recent growth. From there, details are scarce. It has not been publicly explained how this relationship takes shape or what role each party plays, but there are a series of interesting data that are worth analyzing carefully. Now, if we go down one more level in the documents, the relationship becomes somewhat clearer. Huawei’s presence in Yuanjie would have materialized through Hubble Investment, an investment firm controlled by the Chinese group. As collected by Sina Finance Its entry occurred in September 2020 through a double formula: purchase of existing shares and subscription to a capital increase. With this operation, Hubble controlled 4.36% of Yuanjie, a percentage that later remained at 3.27% after the IPO. If we analyze the jump we can say that it is not only explained by the trend of the sector, but also by recent decisions. Yuanjie announced in February an investment of 1,251 million yuan, about 181 million dollarsto build a new production base in Xixian New Area, in the Chinese province of Shaanxi, where it also has its headquarters. Shortly after, in March, communicated his intention to explore an independent listing in Hong Kong. Two years earlier, in addition, the company had announced an investment of 50 million dollars in the United States to strengthen its international presence. Yuanjie’s journey is also best understood by looking at its founder. Zhang Xingang trained in the United States, where he obtained a doctorate in materials science at the University of Southern California and worked in companies linked to fiber optics. His time at Luminent and, later, at Source Photonics, placed him at the heart of this type of technology before returning to China. There he founded Yuanjie in 2013, with an initial focus more linked to the competitive Chinese telecommunications market, and in 2022 he took it to the STAR market in Shanghai, a platform designed for technology companies. To better understand this case, it is also worth looking at the moment that Huawei is going through. After the sanctions imposed by the United States in 2019the company was forced to reconfigure much of its business, especially in key areas such as semiconductors and software. Far from disappearing, it has gone rebuilding his position relying on its own development, from its Kirin chips to HarmonyOSand has regained weight in its domestic market. This context helps to understand why any movement linked to strategic technologies once again attracts attention to the Chinese company. In this framework, Yuanjie’s relationship with Huawei, as reported by Forbes, fits as one more possible piece within this process of technological reinforcement. There are no public details that allow us to talk about a defined strategy in the field of photonics or the specific role played by each party. But there is an underlying idea that is difficult to ignore: in the midst of a race to expand the infrastructure of artificial intelligence, technologies capable of moving data more quickly and efficiently are gaining weight. Images | Huawei | Yuanjie In Xataka | The looming bottleneck in AI is neither RAM nor gas: it’s that TSMC’s N3 node is absolutely saturated

Huawei arrived at MWC as if the European blockade attempt had not happened. And he left as one of the great protagonists

There are images that summarize geopolitical tension better than any official document. One of them occurred in Barcelona during the last Mobile World Congress. While several European capitals debate how to reduce the presence of suppliers considered high risk in telecommunications networks, Huawei appeared at the sector’s largest fair with a presence that is difficult to ignore. The Chinese company arrived at the event with one of the most visible spaces in the venue and left as one of the most notable presences at the congress, a scene that helps to understand the current relationship between Europe and the technology giant. The image. When touring the pavilions of the Barcelona exhibition center, it was quickly understood the weight that Huawei had decided to exhibit. As Politico tells itthe company installed one of the largest exhibition spaces at the event and located it in one of the busiest areas of the complex, a location usually reserved for the most powerful actors in the industry. During the days of the fair, that stand became a constant crossing point for executives, operators and analysts who toured the congress. Prominence also on the agenda. Beyond its deployment within the venue, Huawei also took up space in the official MWC programming. Company executives participated in different sessions of the congress and the company was among the actors present in the debates on network infrastructures and technological evolution of the sector. That role was reinforced with a recognition at the Global Mobile Awardsthe awards that are presented every year during the event. The award for one of its network infrastructure developments served as a reminder that, despite the political climate surrounding the company in part of Europe, its technological weight within the industry remains relevant. The European contrast. The scene left by the MWC contrasts with the political climate that has surrounded Huawei in part of Europe for several years. The European Commission has been toughening its discourse for some time on suppliers considered high risk in critical telecommunications infrastructure and has encouraged Member States to reduce their dependence on them. In parallel, several European countries have taken measures to limit or withdraw their technology from sensitive networks, especially in the deployment of 5G, with decisions in countries such as Germany, which has prompted the withdrawal of Chinese components in critical parts of the networkor Sweden, that banned Huawei from its 5G networks. The result is a fragmented map in which regulatory pressure coexists with a more complex industrial reality. Spain has not been immune to the European debate on Huawei either, although its evolution has followed a less abrupt path than in other countries. The Government has not decreed a formal ban, but the company’s role in critical infrastructure has been progressively decreasing. In the deployment of 5G, the large operators have been replacing their technology in the network corethe part that manages user communications and data. The result is an intermediate scenario: Huawei is still present in the technological ecosystem, but its weight in the most sensitive points of the networks has been significantly reduced. A resilience already known. The Barcelona scene fits a pattern that Huawei has been repeating for years. Following the sanctions imposed by the United States in 2019, many analysts assumed that the company would be relegated to a secondary role in the global technology industry. However, the company quickly refocused its strategy: strengthened its domestic market in China, developed its own chips and opted for an independent software ecosystem after losing access to Google services. This adaptation process allowed the company to remain present in numerous segments of the sector, even in markets where its position had been weakened. The image that Huawei left at the MWC. We can interpret it as a moment within a longer story. For years, different actors have tried to stop the advance of the Chinese giant in the global technology industry. However, the company has continued to reorganize its strategy and maintain a presence in the sector. What happened in Barcelona suggests that this process is far from over. Quite the opposite: we are watching a new stage unfold in real time. Images | Huawei In Xataka | The US has decided to shoot itself in the foot and destroy one of the best AI companies in the country

Huawei has had half the West against it for six years. Your answer is the Mate 80 Pro

The market had been warning for some time: Huawei was going to return. Google’s veto United States ostracized to a Chinese company that was taken as a scapegoat at the dawn of the current trade war. What was initially a blow has ended in a big comeback leading he domestic market with more than 18% share. and he Huawei Mate 80 Pro It is another example that the brand does not want us to forget about its mobile phones outside of China. There are a couple of very important asterisks. In short. We told it a few days ago: Huawei’s best feature has been neither its technological innovation nor its investment to give wings to the Chinese foundry. His best quality has been resilience. That translates to 880 billion yuan (about $127 billion). registered in 2025. Put in context, it is the company’s second best year after the glorious 2020 in which it hugged Samsung and Apple and in which it achieved 891,000 million yuan (129,000 million dollars). And it has achieved this by looking at the local market, building an ecosystem under the name of HarmonyOS (something that is very popular in China, and Xiaomi is an example of this) and managing to be in all parts of the business. Huawei was no longer just consumer technology: it was home automation and even cars. The Western blow pushed not the reinvention of a company that was already on that path, but rather to seek that goal more ardently. And it seems that they are moving, again, outside their borders. Mate 80 Pro. In Spain we have continued receiving Huawei devices. For example, smart watches are some of the best you can buy – we just published our review of the Huawei Watch GT Runner 2-, in headphones they have models as interesting as the FreeClip 2 and we have continued receiving tablets and some mobile phones like the Huawei Pure 80 or the Mate X7a foldable. However, not all of them arrived and the Mate 80 Pro, the company’s spearhead, seemed trapped in China. In a recent presentation that we were able to attend in Madrid, Huawei has shown a slide in which it confirms the price in euros of the Huawei Mate 80 Pro, a mobile phone with a 6.75-inch OLED screen, with 8,000 nits of brightnesswith its own Kirin 9030 processor and a triplet of cameras made up of: 50 Mpx main with variable aperture from f/1.4 to f/4.0. 40 Mpx wide angle. 48 Mpx 4x telephoto with an impressive f/2.1 aperture. They have not talked about markets, yes. No concessions. The price? 1,299 euros that are a declaration of intentions. In the analysis of the Huawei Mate X7 we have seen that the performance of that chip is more similar to that of a mid-range than that of a TOP range. It is commendable that they have managed to develop it without being able to access the resources of the West – of ASMLmainly-, but it is not a processor for a 1,300 euro mobile. It also doesn’t have 5G at this point. However, in the rest of the sections in which they can innovate and grow as they did before the veto, they are doing so. 100 W charging, cameras that promise a lot, good storage speed and screens to match. It’s a “here we are, we continue making high-end mobile phones”, a declaration of intent and a kind of “because I can”. The reality: it’s complicated. However, there is no denying the elephant in the room: the Huawei Mate 80 Pro, no matter how good it looks, still cannot natively access Google mobile services. It is no longer not being able to install your apps, but others that depend on those GMS They won’t work on the phone. It’s a huge concession for many users, but it may not sound so bad to others. We are in a time in which many Europeans are beginning to resonate with the idea of ​​abandoning American technology and softwareand that’s where Google comes in. In hardware there are proposals such as Fairphone 6 and every time more alternatives appear of software so as not to have to depend on those American programs. Who had… retained? As I say, it is undeniable that Huawei’s position by sneaking a mobile phone for 1,300 euros with so many concessions is complex and optimistic, but it is still an interesting approach: they are gaining confidence thanks to rising like foam in the local market and they know that they have good foundations and, at least, a name that continues to sound good in the heads of many who have good memories of beasts like the P30 Pro. At the moment, we don’t know where this Mate 80 Pro will end up being released. Perhaps that announcement of the price of 1,299 euros is putting its foot in to test the temperature of the water, but although they know that they are competing at a disadvantage, a mobile phone of that price is a better thermometer of how the European market vibrates than a 2,100 euro foldable like the X7. In Xataka | Chinese mobile phones conquered the market by dividing into a thousand different brands. Now they are doing just the opposite.

The new HUAWEI WATCH GT Runner 2 is now on sale and it does so with a launch promo: it comes with a discount and gifts

HUAWEI continues to strengthen (a lot) its line of watches. We already loved his last WATCH GT 6but now it brings something different. This is the HUAWEI WATCH GT Runner 2, a lightweight device that is ideal for those who like running, although all without giving up being a complete smartwatch. And be careful, because brings a launch promo that is very worthwhile. Designed for running, but also for everyday life This new HUAWEI watch is, as we said above, very light. It has a titanium case and, with the strap, it weighs less than 45 grams. This will allow you to feel like you don’t have a thing on your wrist all day long, and that’s not to mention that you won’t suffer from annoying bounces when running. But, despite being compact and light, it has plenty of battery: offers up to 7 days of normal use which we can stretch to 14 days in its low consumption mode. Its use is very oriented to all those people who like to go running. Whether you are looking to improve or are already thinking about doing a marathon, with the WATCH GT Runner 2 you will have metrics that are not usually present in most watchessuch as ground contact time or the running ability index (RAI), a parameter that will help you evaluate each race and is based on pace and heart rate. More things to highlight. It has a new 3D floating antenna with a signal that is 3.5 times more powerful than the previous generation. What does that mean? That the watch will track each of your races much more accurately, without interruptions in areas with poor signal that can ruin the measurement of your times. All added to a ‘Smart Marathon Mode’, which allows you to both prepare for one of these events and manage your effort and recovery during it. But we must be clear about one thing: is a very complete smartwatch. Beyond the fact that it is compatible with both iOS and Android, it should be noted that it has an integrated ECG (so you can monitor your heart), microphone and is compatible with sensors from other manufacturers such as chest straps or pedometers. You have it cheaper, with two extra straps and more We always say that when it comes to a new device, it is better to wait. However, there are launch promos like the one for this HUAWEI WATCH GT Runner 2 that make it worth jumping into it at the start. The price of the device is 399 euros, but if we use the code ‘ARN2XA‘, we can take advantage of a direct discount of 50 euros. Therefore, It remains at 349 euros in the HUAWEI Store. But that’s not the only thing that makes it worth it. In addition to the discount, We will also take two extra straps. This is ideal for two things: it allows you to change the design of your watch so you don’t get bored and it allows you to have spare parts. Along with these, we will also get what HUAWEI calls MultiPass, a package valued at 116 euros and that includes several benefits such as 90 days of HUAWEI Health+ or Komoot, among other things. {“videoId”:”x9zwr94″,”autoplay”:true,”title”:”The pendrive is not dead: 7 ways to give it a second life”, “tag”:”Webedia-prod”, “duration”:”856″} What if you also want headphones? Then one of the two packs that are available may suit you better. The first of them, called ‘Sports Pack‘, includes, in addition to this new watch, the two extra straps and the MultiPass, some HUAWEI FreeArc. This pack would have a value of 587 euros, although it is now reduced to 449 euros. With the code ‘ARN2XA’, its price remains at 449 euros. In Xataka Smart Home New at Lidl (starting next February 23): a power strip for the garden or terrace for less than 10 euros Some of the links in this article are affiliated and may provide a benefit to Xataka. In case of non-availability, offers may vary. Images | HUAWEI In Xataka | The best smartwatches: their analyzes and videos are here In Xataka | Best smartwatch in quality price. Which one to buy and 10 recommended smart watches (function() { window._JS_MODULES = window._JS_MODULES || {}; var headElement = document.getElementsByTagName(‘head’)(0); if (_JS_MODULES.instagram) { var instagramScript = document.createElement(‘script’); instagramScript.src=”https://platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js”; instagramScript.async = true; instagramScript.defer = true; headElement.appendChild(instagramScript); – The news The new HUAWEI WATCH GT Runner 2 is now on sale and it does so with a launch promo: it comes with a discount and gifts was originally published in Xataka by Juan Lorente .

The US tried to burden Huawei with vetoes. Huawei’s response: thank you very much for everything

According to the RAE, the resilience It is the ability of a material, mechanism or system to recover its initial state when the disturbance to which it had been subjected has ceased. According to the tech industry, resilience is… Huawei. After nearly half a decade of frontal attack by the US administrationthe Chinese company has just achieved its second best result on record to date. 127 billion dollars. Huawei Technologies record more than 880 billion yuan ($127 billion) by 2025, according to company executives. This is the second highest figure recorded for the company, after the historical figure it achieved of 891 billion yuan (129 billion dollars). which he obtained in 2020. China’s role. After the fight launched by the United States government, China’s national plan with Huawei has been clear: make it the main actor in the country. During the last year, the company managed to take first place in mobile phone sales, surpassing Apple according to IDC data. The Harmony Tsunami. The United States banned Huawei from the Android ecosystem. The answer was not to improvise an alternative, but to do something much more ambitious: build your own with HarmonyOS. That has been the key to not being buried. Huawei didn’t just develop a replacement for Android; has managed to develop a complete and integrated ecosystem. A system that connects mobile phones, smart watches, tablets and even electric cars under the same architecture and services. HarmonyOS has permeated, according to Huawei itself, in more than 100 million smartphones (sales estimates five years ago gave Huawei barely 10 million after its crisis), and this is just the beginning. Ambition. Huawei has doubled its artificial intelligence infrastructure in recent years, betting on its internally designed Ascend chips and becoming a key player to train some of the great AI models. Together with its partner SMIC, and without access to the EUV machinery of the Dutch ASML, Huawei has managed raise the attention of companies like Intelwhose executives warned a few days ago that the blockade of Huawei was having exactly the opposite effect to that desired. Summing up. There are several pillars that support Huawei’s rise: Strong support from the Chinese Government A clear strategy to achieve technological self-sufficiency Massive and sustained investment in R&D, even in critical moments of the veto Building an enabling ecosystem that unites hardware, software and services. An ecosystem, also, open to other manufacturers Yes, but. Huawei continues to face the challenge of having practically disappeared in the smartphone and tablet market in Europe, as well as convincing in China that its high-end phones are a better alternative to the iPhone (Huawei is gaining in sales, but in high-end the iPhone continues to reign even in China). Despite this, the paradigm change is clear: Huawei is obtaining the same income as in 2020 despite having lost muscle outside its native country. It is the best proof that trying to isolate it from the Western world may not have been the best idea. Image | Xataka In Xataka | Catalonia wanted to create the mother of networks for its public headquarters with Huawei equipment. He thought better of it

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