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The Smartphone of Theseus —

If new phones can’t ship with Google apps, how about small upgrades to 2019 phones?


  • The Huawei P30 Lite, now with a new hat (and more RAM).


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  • The “New Edition” comes in silver.


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  • Here’s the camera assembly for the Huawei P30 Pro and… wait, what? Is that a square camera lens?


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  • That under-the-square cover is a mirror, which allows the whole camera assembly to be horizontal.

  • This gives you an idea of just how much more room Huawei has to work with thanks to the periscope.


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  • There is still a camera bump.


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  • The front design is pretty standard. There’s a notch.


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  • The sides of the screen are curved, just like a Samsung phone.


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  • There’s no earpiece. Instead, you get a vibrating screen.


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  • Huawei’s latest flagship, the P30 Pro.


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  • Here’s a crazy case option: this is for scuba diving.


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  • Want to really show off your P30 Pro? How about a Swarovski crystal-encrusted gift box and phone case?


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Huawei is still struggling to cope with the Trump administration’s US export ban, which blocks US companies from doing business with the Chinese company. While Huawei can be pretty independent as far as hardware goes, the loss of Google’s software is basically going to kill Huawei’s phone business outside of China. The company is already expecting a 20-percent drop in phone sales in 2020, and thanks to the yearly lifecycle of smartphones, a lot of Google/Huawei phones are still on the market, so we’re seeing only the beginning of the effects of the export ban.

Huawei is doing its best to delay the effects of the export ban, though, and lately, it seems to have come up with a new loophole to keep shipping the Google apps: re-release old smartphones. The way the export ban has worked in practice is that Huawei devices that launched before the export ban (and some that launched even slightly after) can still be sold with Google apps. Devices that launched well after the ban, like the Mate 30 Pro, are stuck without the Google apps. So Huawei’s solution, and its interpretation of the law, is that re-releases of old devices can still ship with Google apps.

So meet the “New Editions” of old Huawei phones. This week, the company announced that the Huawei P30 Pro would be returning as the “Huawei P30 Pro New Edition,” and earlier this year it re-launched the P30 Lite as the “P30 Lite New Edition.” Both of these phones are from March 2019, so they’re well over a year old now, but they both have Google app licenses, so welcome back!

What’s new in a “new edition?” Well, first you get more RAM and storage. The P30 Pro New Edition has a new baseline of 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage, which is up from the 6GB of RAM and 128GB of storage on what I guess we’re now going to call the “Old Edition.” There’s also new software: Android 10 with Huawei’s EMUI skin (the old version launched with Android 9). And there’s a new color: silver. The Old Edition of the P30 Pro was a flagship smartphone with flagship smartphone pricing: €999 or $1,125. The New Edition is now a year-old smartphone, and the one confirmed price we have is for the UK, which is £699, or $852.

With the launch of this New Edition, Huawei’s lineup looks pretty awkward. There’s this year’s P40 Pro with 2020 hardware and no Google apps or last year’s P30 Pro New Edition with 2019 hardware and killer apps like the Play Store, YouTube, Gmail, Google Maps, and the Google Assistant. Even if you are somehow invested in the Android ecosystem but not the Google ecosystem, the non-Google apps you use most likely still rely on Google APIs to function. Google Play Services contains things like the Google Maps API, Firebase Cloud Messaging (for push notifications), and Google location APIs, and without these, many apps just won’t work.

It looks like the Huawei export ban will still be with us for a very long time. Yesterday, the Trump administration extended the ban for an entire year, although there is still a “support exemption” for existing Huawei customers.

The P30 Pro launches—for a second time—on June 3.

Listing image by Getty Images | SOPA Images

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