Honor has announced a new 5G smartphone, the View40, and partnerships with global semiconductor companies, including Intel and Qualcomm, revealing that the company is no longer subject to US restrictions after spinning off from former parent company Huawei Technologies Co.

The View40, unveiled at a launch event on Friday, is the first new phone from Honor since being sold by Huawei, which lost access to Google apps and services when the US put the company on its so-called entity list in 2019. The company has not confirmed that an international variant of the View40 will include Google Mobile Services, but analysts expect that it will .

While Google was not mentioned at the launch event, Honor confirmed that it is resuming partnerships with a number of international suppliers. The company said it is working with US companies Microsoft, Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, and Micron Technology. Honor also listed South Korean companies Samsung and SK Hynix, Taiwan-based MediaTek and Japan-based Sony.

Most of these companies either design or manufacture chips. Access to Qualcomm, the world’s largest smartphone chip vendor, is considered especially critical for many mobile device makers.

The partnerships show that attempts to cut off Chinese companies from US technology still have workarounds that could be used in the future if the relationship between the two countries does not thaw under US President Joe Biden, who came into office on Wednesday.

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Honor's new View40 smartphone is the first from the brand since being sold by Huawei, which is currently restricted from using US technology after being blacklisted in 2019. Photo: HonorHonor's new View40 smartphone is the first from the brand since being sold by Huawei, which is currently restricted from using US technology after being blacklisted in 2019. Photo: Honor

Honor's new View40 smartphone is the first from the brand since being sold by Huawei, which is currently restricted from using US technology after being blacklisted in 2019. Photo: Honor

Honor has announced a new 5G smartphone, the View40, and partnerships with global semiconductor companies, including Intel and Qualcomm, revealing that the company is no longer subject to US restrictions after spinning off from former parent company Huawei Technologies Co.

The View40, unveiled at a launch event on Friday, is the first new phone from Honor since being sold by Huawei, which lost access to Google apps and services when the US put the company on its so-called entity list in 2019. The company has not confirmed that an international variant of the View40 will include Google Mobile Services, but analysts expect that it will .

While Google was not mentioned at the launch event, Honor confirmed that it is resuming partnerships with a number of international suppliers. The company said it is working with US companies Microsoft, Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, and Micron Technology. Honor also listed South Korean companies Samsung and SK Hynix, Taiwan-based MediaTek and Japan-based Sony.

Most of these companies either design or manufacture chips. Access to Qualcomm, the world’s largest smartphone chip vendor, is considered especially critical for many mobile device makers.

The partnerships show that attempts to cut off Chinese companies from US technology still have workarounds that could be used in the future if the relationship between the two countries does not thaw under US President Joe Biden, who came into office on Wednesday.

Honor CEO Zhao Ming unveils the 5G View40 smartphone at the launch event in Shenzhen on Friday. Photo: Honor

Honor CEO Zhao Ming unveils the 5G View40 smartphone at the launch event in Shenzhen on Friday. Photo: Honor

At the launch event held in Shenzhen, Honor CEO Zhao Ming said the company has weathered extreme difficulties over the last five months. Honor, originally launched as a budget brand under Huawei, aims to move further into mid-tier and high-end devices, Zhao said.

Starting at 3,599 yuan (US$557), the View40 is a mid-tier device that comes with several features that could be considered premium, a traditional hallmark of Honor and competitors like Xiaomi, OnePlus and other Chinese brands. The View40 includes a 4,000mAh battery that can be fully charged in 35 minutes using its 66W charging. The curved display has a resolution of 2676x1236 pixels and a 120Hz refresh rate, a feature typically found in much more expensive devices.

With Honor now separate from Huawei, the View40 is not powered by its former parent company’s Kirin chips. Instead, the phone’s 5G functionality comes courtesy of the MediaTek Dimensity 1000+ system-on-a-chip.