鸿蒙 next linux
On 22 October, Chinese tech giant Huawei finally announced the launch of the long-awaited “pure-blood” operating system: the 5.0 version of HarmonyOS, often dubbed HarmonyOS NEXT. “Pure-blood” means that the operating system was built from the ground up and not based on Android or Linux like previous versions of the OS. It may or may not be a Harry Potter reference.
At the product launch event, Huawei also announced several new products, from Nova 13 and Pura 70 phones and the MatePad tablet to watches and even cars. However, all eyes were on the homegrown operating system. Since its announcement in late 2023, the “pure-blood” operating system has been one of, if not the most anticipated product from Huawei. The 5.0 version of the OS will be 30% faster than HarmonyOS 4, extend battery life by 56 minutes and decrease memory use by 1.5 gigabytes. All Huawei devices can now share the same system, paving the way for the Internet of Things services that control various devices and appliances with the same system from Huawei.
Huawei unveils new smartwatches as trifold phones sell out
The system has also exceeded expectations in its scale, with 99.99% of the ap
Qt for HarmonyOS
English中文
HarmonyOS (HMOS) (Chinese: 鸿蒙; pinyin: Hóngméng; trans. "Vast Mist") is a distributed operating system developed by Huawei for smartphones, tablets, smart TVs, smart watches, personal computers and other smart devices. It has a microkernel design with a single framework: the operating system selects suitable kernels from the abstraction layer in the case of devices that use diverse resources.
HarmonyOS was officially launched by Huawei, and first used in Honor smart TVs, in August 2019. It was later used in Huawei wireless routers, IoT in 2020, followed by smartphones, tablets and smartwatches from June 2021.
From 2019 to 2024, versions 1 to 4 of the operating system were based on code from the Android Open Source Project (AOSP) and the Linux kernel; many Android apps could be sideloaded on HarmonyOS.
The next iteration of HarmonyOS became known as HarmonyOS NEXT. HarmonyOS NEXT was announced on August 4, 2023, and officially launched on October 22, 2024. It replaced the OpenHarmony multi-kernel system with its own HarmonyOS microkernel at its core and removed all Android code. Since version 5, HarmonyOS only supports apps in its native "Ap
Living In Harmony
OpenHarmony is often confused with being a Linux-based system because it can run Linux applications through a subsystem that includes a Linux kernel. However, OpenHarmony is fundamentally different from a typical Linux distribution. Let's break down why OpenHarmony is not classified as a Linux system despite having some Linux components:
OpenHarmony's Main Kernel: The primary kernel of OpenHarmony is the LiteOS kernel, which is a lightweight, real-time operating system kernel which the OS itself is derived from former Huawei’s 2015 LiteOS open source lightweight Real-time operating system (RTOS). This kernel is distinct from the Linux kernel and is designed to be modular, scalable, and suitable for a wide range of devices, from small IoT gadgets to more complex smart devices.
Linux Kernel in OpenHarmony: While OpenHarmony can utilize a Linux kernel through a subsystem (typically for compatibility purposes), this is not its primary kernel which was also introduced in 1.1.0 with Long Term Support (LTS) development later in April 2021 after the initial version 1.0 in September 10, 2020 that only had LiteOS kernel for lightweight systems only. The
Multiple inbound/outbound proxies: one V2Ray instance supports in parallel multiple inbound and outbound protocols. Each protocol works independently.
Customizable routing: incoming traffic can be sent to other outbounds based on routing configuration. It is easy to road traffic by target region or domain.
Multiple protocols: V2Ray supports multiple protocols, including Socks, HTTP, Shadowsocks, VMess etc. Each protocol may have its own transport, such as TCP, mKCP, WebSocket etc.
Obfuscation: V2Ray has built in obfuscation to hide traffic in TLS, and can run in parallel with web servers.
Reverse proxy: General support of reverse proxy. Can be used to build tunnels to localhost.
Multiple platforms: V2Ray runs natively on Windows, Mac OS, Linux, etc. There is also third party support on mobile.
Mobile: Support HarmonyOS
I love Obsidian. Really love it. It’s where I think, learn, and build my second brain—across my Windows laptop, Android phone, and even a dusty old Linux tablet. But now, there’s a gap: my daily driver is a HarmonyOS device, and I miss Obsidian like a lost limb.
I’m not alone. Thousands of us in China (and beyond!) are watching HarmonyOS grow into something truly independent—not just “Android without Google.” It’s fast, privacy-focused, and everywhere here. But every time I try to sideload Obsidian’s APK, I hit quirks: broken gestures, weird file permissions, or sync hiccups. I just want my vaults to work like they do everywhere else.
Why This Matters Beyond Just Me:
HarmonyOS isn’t niche anymore. Huawei sold 50M+ flagship devices last year—many to students, researchers, and writers who’d adore Obsidian.We’re hacking around it (Termux, outdated APKs, janky web apps), but it’s like using a paperclip to hold a bridge together.
The alternative? People settle for closed, cloud-bound notes apps—the opposite of what makes Obsidian magical.
A Humble Request:
If Obsidian could officially support HarmonyOS—even just a basic native build—you’d unlock