mercredi 22 mai 2019

Huawei is in talks with Aptoide to doubtless replace the Google Play Store, reportedly asked developers to publish apps on AppGallery


Huawei is in talks with Aptoide to doubtless replace the Google Play Store, reportedly asked developers to publish apps on AppGallery
Caught within the middle of the cold trade war between the U.S.and China, Huawei has found itself bleeding heavily. With a recent executive order by the U.S.
government, Huawei cannot be an authorized automaton partner.
This means that the corporate can got to consider AOSP builds for future devices and not have access to the pre-release builds of the industrial version ofGoogle’s operating system. Upcoming Huawei devices won’t have access to Google Play Services or other Google apps and the existing ones may only be supported so long as Huawei does not update them. Even though the U.S.
Commerce Department has mitigated these restrictions on Huawei quickly, it may not have enough time to enjoy this respite.
Since it plans to exchange automaton with own package might take longer than expected, Huawei is in planning to bolster its own app store, known as the AppGallery.
In the meantime, the Chinese giant is consulting third-party marketplace Aptoide to provide users an alternative to the Google Play Store.

As per Portuguese publication Dinheiro Vivo, Aptoide is already negotiating with Huawei to seize the opportunity.
Aptoide hosts over 900,000 apps with almost 200 million users.
Alongside repositories like APK Mirror, Aptoide is one of the most popular sources to download Android apps, even when it may not be officially supported via Google Play Store.

At constant time, Huawei has been trying to pursue developers to publish their apps directly on the company’s own AppGallery.
This will enable it to bypass the restrictions came upon by the U.S.
government’s ban, though Google apps like YouTube, Google Maps, and a host of other services will still be inaccessible for users.
The company claims that by the top of 2018, the AppGallery had been business fifty million users, Bloomberg reported.

In Europe, wherever Huawei enjoys a significant share of the smartphone user base, it's making an attempt to incentivize medium operators to pre-install the AppGallery.
This move might be favorable to the Chinese company since Google is facing 3 fair charges, together with one associated with automaton.
In this case, the ECU Union levied a fine of four.3 billion euros (~$4.8 billion) for forcing users to use its own products including Google Search and maintain dominance over online search results, thereby overshadowing competitor platforms like Bing or DuckDuckGo.

It is equally vital to notice that while not support for Google’s app, the step might not be terribly savory for users and Huawei.
We’re desperate to see however long the corporate will face this resistance. Meanwhile, there’s also a possibility that the U.S. Department of Commerce may ease the prohibition further, and even reach a mutual conciliation eventually – just like in the case of another Chinese company, ZTE.

As for the Aptoide store, there are two possibilities with how Huawei could use its popularity. It might either pre-install the store on Huawei smartphones or integrate its functionality within the Huawei’s AppGallery. However, the store is often used to download paid apps for free, and this might worry developers and Google.
How Huawei deals with its one thing we’ll learn within the longer run.

Until then, we’ll keep you sophisticated regarding the implications of the prohibition and additionally keep a watch at the tides of the amendment.

Belmir

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