MobileNews

Qualcomm in talks with Honor to supply chips, Honor hopes to become China’s top smartphone brand

Just last month, Huawei announced the sale of its Honor smartphone business to a consortium based in Shenzhen, China. It wasn’t longs before rumors began swirling that the smartphone brand would launch a flagship phone featuring the recently announced Qualcomm Snapdragon 888. The latest report adds to that same front, reporting that Qualcomm and Honor have already been in discussions of supplying Qualcomm chips for Honor devices.

In the report, a source close to Qualcomm pointed out that Honor and the chipmaker have already been in talks to supply chipsets for future Honor phones. Honor is quite optimistic about the negotiations and both parties are close to reaching an agreement. On that note, Honor plans to proceed with its V40 series of smartphones using MediaTek chipsets.

Honor 30 Pro +
Honor 30 Pro +

On another note, Honor CEO Zhao Ming explicitly announced that Honor aims to become the top smartphone brand in China’s smartphone market. This was reportedly stated during an employee communications meeting. One week after the announcement of the sale, Zhao did mention that Honor would begin to release other products outside of smartphones.

If you recall, the US-Huawei ban has severely limited both Huawei and Honor (prior to its sale) from doing business with US companies. This excluded the brand from being able to obtain Google Mobile Services licenses and barred Qualcomm from being able to sell chipsets to either brand.


Author: Ricky
Source: GSMArena

Related posts
AI & RoboticsNews

Remaining Windsurf team and tech acquired by Cognition, makers of Devin: ‘We’re friends with Anthropic again’

AI & RoboticsNews

Anthropic launches finance-specific Claude with built-in data connectors, higher limits and prompt libraries

AI & RoboticsNews

Finally, a dev kit for designing on-device, mobile AI apps is here: Liquid AI’s LEAP

AI & RoboticsNews

Salesforce used AI to cut support load by 5% — but the real win was teaching bots to say ‘I’m sorry’

Sign up for our Newsletter and
stay informed!