Huawei vs Apple: A tale of two smartphone worlds

Just when it looked as if the smartphone world was converging on a standard template of design, features and functionality, the trade war between China and the US has created a new divide.

On the one side, Apple two weeks ago unveiled a new series of iPhones that take will full advantage of the latest version of its operating system, iOS, now in its 13th generation. On the other side, Huawei last week launched its new flagship Mate 30 series that has been forcefully cut loose from the Android operating system.

There is much talk of Huawei’s own Horizon operating system having been in development for more than five years. However, the US bar on Huawei accessing American technology still means it loses out on the massive feature benefits of an OS that has evolved over a decade via the efforts of both its owner, Google, and a global industry of Android phone makers.

This raises the key smartphone question: can Huawei minus Android still compete with the iPhone 11 series, as well as the Samsung S10 and Note 10 ranges, which operate at the cutting edge of Android evolution? The answer depends not so much on the technology, as on the ability of Huawei to convince its relatively new army of users it is business as usual.

That was the thrust of last week’s launch. The Chinese company’s big unveil was not so much the phone itself, as the new role of HMS, or Huawei Mobile Services. This is a direct replacement of Google Mobile Services (GMS), which essentially represent the Android ecosystem.

The Play Store is an integral element of GMS. Ironically, HMS is also available as a Google Play Store download. Huawei is presently not allowed to add GMS to new handsets, which means it also cannot preinstall the Google Play Store on its new phones.

HMS includes its own advanced features, like App Gallery – a trimmed down alternative to the Play Store, with 45,000 apps available – Huawei ID, push notifications, payments, Themes, Mobile Cloud, Phone Clone and Huawei Health.

However, the handset remains compatible with Android apps. Its operating systems is a version of Android based on Android Open Source Project, which is not included in the US ban, as it is a global project, not owned by Google.

That, in turn, means that users will be able to download apps from the Play Store, but will have to go through a few extra steps to do so. The real loss is that of seamless integration with the store.

The individual apps won’t work without something called the Google Services Framework (GSF), which Huawei says it is not currently allowed to install on new devices. However, various websites offer advice on how to “sideload” the framework from unauthorised sources, and therefore run the Play Store. This does mean neither Google nor Android guarantees the services and performance, and it is the user’s responsibility if anything goes wrong.

That said, Huawei has developed its own versions of most key apps. Users who feel locked into Google Maps, the YouTube app and the Gmail app will not be happy moving across, and it is for them that sideloading would make sense.

Why go to all that trouble, and not just buy an Android phone from other brands? The Samsung S10 and Note 10 phones are every bit as good as the new Apple devices and beat them in many departments.

The answer is simple: the Mate 30 phones are probably the best value for money of the current flagship phones, and the best phone cameras on the market. Huawei took the lead over its rivals in handset photography with the P20 Pro.

The main rear camera is a triple-lens unit comprising a 40MP 27mm wide angle lens with f/1.6 aperture, meaning it has a wide image capture view and lets in as much light as other leading edge phone lenses, and 8MP 125mm telephoto lens, and a 20 MP 16mm ultrawide lens.

Huawei Mate 30.

It incorporates a 3D camera, Leica optics, dual-LED dual-tone flash, and HDR Video with 2160p – that is high-res – shooting 30 frames per second, and ultra slow-motion at 720p shooting at 960 frames per second.

In comparison, the Apple iPhone 11 Pro also offers a triple-lens cameras, but with a 12 MP f/1.8, 26mm wide-angle lens, a 12 MP 52mm telephoto lens and a 12 MP 13mm ultrawide lens. This suggests Apple remains behind Huawei in camera technology.

Huawei also outdoes itself with the selfie camera on the Mate 30 Pro, coming in at 30MP compared to the iPhone 11 Pro’s 12MP. The key difference is that Apple incorporates 3D functionality in the selfie lens, along with higher resolution and more options for video speed.

Both devices have around 6.5- inch displays and large batteries – 3696mAh on the iPhone and 4200 mAh on the Mate 30. However, the iPhone starts at 4GB RAM, while the Mate begins at 6GB, suggesting faster performance.

The choice is not obvious, but it is highly likely that the cutting edge camera will convince enough of a hard core of users to stick to Huawei to keep the brand at the forefront of the smartphone market.

It may not be enough, though, to prevent Apple from regaining its second place in global market share.

iPhone 11 Pro.

How to install Android apps

The website 9to5Google states that it has tested the Huawei Mate 30 Pro running Google Play Services without a hitch. However, it required “sideloading”:

Open the built-in browser

Head to www.lzplay.net

Hit the big blue button to download the Google Services Framework installer. The page is in Chinese, the text reads: “Explore the Google Play Million Premium app with one click to install the Google Services Framework.

Click the downloads button for app-release.apk

Allow the Google Services Assistant installer to install all of the necessary files

Once the Google Play Store is installed, run the application.

You may encounter issues being able to sign in. Restart your device and re-launch.

Sign in and install any Google apps required

Follow the video guide on YouTube

Arthur Goldstuck is founder of World Wide Worx and editor-in-chief of Gadget.co.za. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram on @art2gee

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By Arthur Goldstuck
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