The Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei announced the release of an inexpensive Enjoy 20e smartphone through the Vmall trading platform. Sales of this device will begin soon.
Huawei Enjoy 20e
We know the device has a 6,3-inch display with a small notch at the top for the single front-facing camera. According to available data, an HD+ format panel with a resolution of 1600x720 pixels is used.
The smartphone is built on the basis of one of the MediaTek processors, which works together with 4 GB of RAM. The device can store 128 GB of information.
In the back of the case there is a double camera β probably with 13 and 2 MP sensors. There is a fingerprint scanner.
We are also talking about the presence of a battery with a capacity of 5000 mAh. The device will come with the Android operating system, supplemented by the company's EMUI 10. The price will be approximately 150-160 USD.
It should be noted that Huawei's mobile business has been severely affected by US sanctions. The company dropped out of the top five global smartphone vendors and was forced to spin off its Honor subsidiary into an independent division.
Huawei has decided to completely change its business model to survive the sanctions
When CFO and daughter of Huawei founder Meng Wanzhou recently returned to China, the Huawei heiress vowed to use the lessons of nearly three years of legal uncertainty in Canada to benefit her company.
"All despair and all difficulties, feelings of gratitude and emotion, resilience and responsibility will turn into an impulse to move forward, summon courage for our determined struggle," she said, addressing a crowd of fellow citizens who met her on the runway at Shenzhen Airport.
The result of the sanctions was extremely harsh. In the first six months of this year, the company's revenue fell by almost 30% compared to the same period last year, the biggest drop in the company's history. Huawei's traditional business is actually facing problems, so the technical group is trying to "reinvent itself."
It is about abandoning the development and sale of smartphones and telecommunications equipment, which are being replaced by other areas less dependent on semiconductor imports: cloud services and software for smart cars.
In addition, the company doubled its own research and development to avoid the consequences of US sanctions. Thanks to the investment, Huawei has every chance to become a leader in the new 6G technologies, and then others will depend on its patents, and Huawei will get rid of technology imports from the United States. In essence, said Hank Koopmans, Huawei's head of research and development in the UK, the company is turning into "a huge collection of start-ups".