HarmonyOS 6 Full Overview: New Design, AI Features and Privacy Upgrades [video]
30 comments
·October 22, 2025vachina
Tldw: A guy narrating an advertorial video
torginus
Dunno, I'm pretty interested in HarmonyOS considering it's a major commercial OS that has come along in a long time, and features a number of technological differences such as a pure microkernel, compared to the existing big 3.
Despite that we (I) know next to nothing about it, neither on the user nor the technical side, so a bunch of deep dives would be welcome.
pjmlp
Additionally while much has improved on Harmony documentation it is still not that much available in English.
sgt
Is this the one that is still based on Android or is the new "next" version of Harmony?
torginus
According to wikipedia, they moved to their own kernel in the 5.0 release last year:
sgt
Okay so it won't run Android apps necessarily or be able to access the regular app stores/Play Store. It will need popular apps to be re-released for HarmonyOS NEXT
torginus
Considering Huawei has hundreds of millions of users in China alone, I don't think getting big companies onboard will be difficult.
WhyNotHugo
> Okay so it won't run Android apps necessarily
It does, they implemented a Linux-compatible API and ABI. They claim that apps run unmodified.
pjmlp
Which is kind of easy on their home turf, most relevant apps on the Chinese market are available.
bossyTeacher
In my opinion, the only realistic change to the current mobile duopoly will be an OS coming from China. Especially, as Google has finally started taking steps to kill Android openness as we know it (reducing contributions to AOSP and disallowing side loading), HarmonyOs has a real chance to shake things up
crossroadsguy
So you are saying an OS from China will be on the path of openness and privacy as opposed to iOS and Android? I'd say that's a stretch or wishful thinking. I'd say Europe, if at least few major Govts push it and fund it. But no one knows of course.
nsonha
They said nothing about China pursuing openness and privacy but you're just so eager to present your own wishful thinking as better than theirs
surajrmal
If you look at who contributes 99+% of aosp patches, nothing has actually changed. The same group of companies are still working on it. There is just less public openness about the process as it happens (eg open source code reviews). A lot of this was already happening but there was a strange duplication of process causing workflow problems depending on which way you were developing. They simplified it to a single process.
xethos
I'm not sure I consider this view to be looking back far enough. Android as an OS that people use has been slowly growing more closed and controlled for... well, almost since its inception.
Google has kept an infamously tight leash that OEMs must not stray too far from; the Open Handset Alliance ensures certain Google apps come pre-installed, down to homescreen placement. The OHA mandates OEMs not release "incompatible" versions of Android, or other mobile OS', as well. Should an OEM want to sell Windows Mobile, Amazons FireOS, or Firefox's mobile OS, they will likely lose their license to sell anything with the brand name Android.
Google has also been moving away from the 'O' in AOSP for some time as well. Running many AOSP apps means dealing with what Google treats as abandonware, such as the eMail app, Contacts, and the open launcher (replaced with Google's proprietary launcher).
I'm certain I don't have to tell this crowd about the death of bootloader unlocking and the ROM scene. Telling me this isn't pushed by Google (which I agree with), and following up with "And Google has no way to prevent this" isn't something I see as believable. Google mandates where the YouTube and Chrome apps get placed on the homescreen; you're telling me that, in order to be licensed as Android, Google can't similarly mandate bootloader unlocking?
Nothing changed last week, or even the week before, but the direction isn't terribly difficult to see, IMO.
est
> kill Android openness
Some initial versions of HarmonyOS was partially open source, the "NEXT" version isn't.
brazukadev
Please Huawei, save us from this damned iOS-Android duopoly!
rubymamis
We’ve got Linux.
surajrmal
This is like responding to someone calling for an open alternative to Facebook by saying we have kubernetes. Linux is a helpful head start to solving the problems needed but it is not the full picture. And depending on what you need to build it might get in the way and require adjustment/fine tuning which is non trivial. There is just so much that goes into an OS in terms of polish beyond just getting some pixels on the screen and responding to input.
rjdj377dhabsn
Without massive corporate funding for mobile apps, it doesn't have much chance on phones.
sph
Must Valve do everything to bring Linux to the masses?
(I would love a Steam phone, though that’s never gonna happen)
janwl
Linux is a kernel. We don’t have a usable operating system to go with it besides Android.
yjftsjthsd-h
Point of order: We have several usable OS to go with it, just not that target phones and have good hardware support.
Essential reading for anyone curious about the microkernel architecture in recent versions of HarmonyOS: https://www.usenix.org/system/files/osdi24-chen-haibo.pdf