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by jauntywundrkind
894 days ago
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I was referring more to the harmony ecosystem, including OpenHarmony, which does have a variety of uses. I agree it's too early to have strong conclusions. But there's a huge range of sectors represented at a recent-ish OpenHarmony conference. Industrial, energy, vehicle uses listed. https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/eGxegRJCKhuYz8IvsxhE5g The use of a variety of different kernels & microkernels, bound by a common DBusSoft distributed layer, is what seems compelling to me. It means one can have very very small microcontrollers readily participating in Harmony, and ideally it means interesting Plan 9 like capabilities across bigger computing (phones/desktop/tvs/&c), where inter-system control just works. It could all go nowhere or fizzle... but I see very narrow specific heavily industrialized works like Matter, which is trying desperately just to make multiple controllers capable of running one device (an incredibly low bar for ubicomp), and I am glad & excited someone else is working to connect computing systems like Harmony is. The technicals have some compelling ideas. |
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There is not a lot of money in interoperability, so this is not an issue with the technology in itself, but the manufacturers will to implement it.
Distributed embedded computing isn't new at all, and one can run any sorts of fancy software on an ESP32 if need be, e.g. AtomVM.
HarmonyOS is a shot at technology independence, which is a fine goal in itself, but the chances of it being successful in Europe or the US are minimal at best.