Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Huawei CEO

Huawei CEO calls Samsung's Tizen OS 'hopeless'

Huawei CEO calls Samsung's Tizen OS 'hopeless'

Samsung's self-made Tizen operating system for smartphones isn't looking too hot with repeated delays, and now at least one phone maker is just saying no to the OS.

Richard Yu, CEO of Huawei's consumer business group, called Tizen a hopeless platform with "no chance to be successful" in an interview with the Wall Street Journal.

Yu went on to explain that it's difficult even for the Chinese company to turn a profit with Windows Phone products. The Huawei executive said it's hard to market such devices, and noted the company already lost money trying to push these handsets during the course of two years.

Huawei, once one of Tizen's original supporters, now joins the growing group of phone manufacturers and networks turning away from Samsung's platform.

Yet despite the deserters and Huawei's harsh words, there are still a number of companies — including Intel, LG and Vodafone — holding out hope that the Android-alternative will release one day.

Android armada
The biggest problem Tizen faces is the fact that there aren't enough apps on the platform compared to the extensive software libraries developed for Android and iOS. Previously, Yu has also explained why Firefox's mobile OS may not be everything it's cracked up to be.

It's for these same reasons Yu said Huawei isn't developing its own mobile operating system. With this in mind it seems the mobile world will continue to be split between Android and iOS while Windows Phone perpetually sits on the sidelines.

Not that Yu is satisfied with this set-up. "We have worries about Android being the only option, but we have no choice," he remarked.

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