Huawei has had a tough year with respect to its smartphone business. The ban which is still in effect has led to delays in the release of its phones especially its flagships. Seeing as its product calendar has suffered a huge disruption, it is not surprising that it has been reported that the next-gen Mate series of smartphones won’t launch until next year. While we wait, more details of the Mate50 series have surfaced.

The source of the new details is the Weibo account 菊厂影业Fans who revealed earlier that the Mate50 series will launch next year. In a Weibo post earlier today, the account revealed that Huawei will probably announce the next-gen Mate smartphones by the end of the second quarter of next year, which is about 9 months from now.
The post also reveals that while Huawei plans to release the Mate50 phones with support for 5G, we will still see 4G variants. The new phones will also launch with a mix of Qualcomm’s Snapdragon processor and Huawei’s own Kirin chipset. The Snapdragon processor will most likely be a 4G version of the yet-to-be-announced Snapdragon 898 processor.
The source also states that Huawei’s strategy, for the time being, will be one flagship series per year rather than two. This means, we most likely won’t get a successor to the Huawei P50 series next year.
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Additionally, Jacob Chen, Samsung Taiwan Vice President, stated that the brand has doubled their budget for marketing of the new foldable phones this year, compared to that for the Note series. He added that the push in promotion seeks to elevate the new foldable devices’ sales to a level seen by the Note series last year. Chen also said that the company is confident in seeing higher sales, with sales already exceeding expectations in South Korea.
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Furthermore, Kiani also stated that Apple’s CEO Tim Cook might have been personally involved in the hiring of the Cercacor executive as well. Kiani added that “Patents began publishing with Marcelo Lamego as inventor. He had patented things, some of the things we had done 20 years ago and were in our products. This was worse than we thought. That’s when we first sued Apple.”














