The Huawei ban is just the start...
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Sign up for Private Internet Access VPN at lmg.gg GET MERCH: lttstore.com Twitter: twitter.com Instagram: @TechLinkedYT Facebook: @TechLinked NEWS SOURCES: THE NEVERENDING SCANDAL UK joining the party, EE and Vodafone drop Huawei phones ft.com ARM breaks ties hexus.net Huawei “working with Google” to handle the situation mobilesyrup.com Android alternative in the fall engadget.com Play Store alternative androidpolice.com Legal measures? theverge.com Double-edged sword kitguru.net HIGHER NUMBER IS BETTER linustechtips.com kitguru.net extremetech.com eurogamer.net 2 MORE CORES TO IMESSAGE WITH linustechtips.com apple.com Announces repair program for flexgate linustechtips.com “fixed” the keyboard mobilesyrup.com Extra footage: youtube.com QUICK BITS SUITE JEBUS, GOOGLE techcrunch.com MAY I SKIP THIS UPDATE PLZ Won’t get it unless you want it arstechnica.com blogs.windows.com windowscentral.com - news.xbox.com AUTOPILOT NEEDS MORE FLIGHT HOURS consumerreports.org jalopnik.com SHOPPING CART? WUZZAT Epic blocks store accounts if they buy a bunch of games in a row kotaku.com Epic accidentally sent customer’s info to random person reddit.com IT’S A FOLDY ROBOT youtube.com #Huaweiban #AMDNavi #8coreMacbook
The video begins by highlighting the ongoing Huawei controversy, noting that the US executive order banning business with Huawei has rippled beyond the US borders. It mentions UK responses, with telecom giants EE and Vodafone dropping Huawei devices from their 5G launch plans, and it covers ARM reportedly instructing its staff to suspend all business with Huawei due to licensing concerns. The host explains that this could be one of the most disruptive moves in Huawei’s ecosystem, given the reliance on ARM designs for Kirin processors and the ripple effects on software licensing. The segment also notes Huawei’s counters to the ban, including statements that they are working with Google to mitigate damage and plans for an alternative operating system to replace Android this fall. The discussion broadens to potential legal avenues Huawei might pursue in the US, arguing that the ban could be challenged as unconstitutional or illegal. The host stresses that the consequences are not limited to Huawei, as American tech giants like Intel, Qualcomm, Microsoft, and Google could lose licensing revenue or component sales, painting a broader economy-wide impact of the crackdown.
Topics · technology · business · geopolitics