Instead, it looks like Huawei has ported the core of EMUI to HarmonyOS, although Huawei is unhappy with those who draw that comparison. According to Huawei Central, the President of Huawei's Consumer Business Software Department, Wang Chenglu, had this to say about HarmonyOS and its similarities with EMUI:
By projecting the source code of AOSP (Android Open Source Project) as the base of Hongmeng OS and judging that Huawei has only changed the skin of Android, reveals that people have less understanding of open source software.
Huawei Central further excuses Huawei by positing that 'not all Android code is developed by Google, most of the code comes from the open-source community'. You can read more about how AOSP works in its FAQ, but taking apart Ars Technica's article with the argument that HarmonyOS uses AOSP misses the point.
Huawei cannot reap the good PR of announcing that it will release a brand-new OS only to release one based on AOSP. Since HarmonyOS uses AOSP as its base, then it is a fork of that OS and not a brand-new one. We have no problem with Huawei doing this, but only if it were forthcoming about it from the start.
Ultimately, Microsoft's failure with Windows Mobile suggests that using AOSP as a base will be a wise move from Huawei. In doing so, Huawei has provided HarmonyOS with the strong developer support and Android app compatibility that Windows Mobile lacked.
However, Huawei's latest comments underscore that it was dishonest in its marketing of HarmonyOS, at least for smartphones. HarmonyOS is not a 'brand-new...operating system', and we are glad that Huawei has finally admitted that this is the case.
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The Link LonkMarch 05, 2021 at 09:47PM
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Huawei's dishonesty continues as it argues that people who call HarmonyOS an Android skin have no idea about software, despite admitting that its OS runs on AOSP - Notebookcheck.net
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