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Huawei unveils new inventions that will transform AI, 5G, and user experience

At Huawei’s “Creating IP, Driving Innovation: Broadening the Innovation Landscape 2022” forum held at its Shenzhen headquarters, the company announced its latest innovations as part of its biennial “Top Ten Inventions” Awards and discussed the broader value of IP licensing and innovation.

The award is designed to recognize inventions that could create new series of products, become important commercial features of existing products, or that generate considerable value for the company and the industry.

Some of the inventions highlighted during the forum include:

The all-new Adder Neural Network: the invention reduces computing power consumption and circuit area by 70% while ensuring accuracy. Derivative technologies can be widely used in terminal devices, smart cars, and telecom networks. It can also greatly save power for consumer electronics.
Iris on Fiber Optics: the passive nature of optical fibers makes them hard to manage. Our invention marks optical iris on fibers, akin to a QR code for each connection. This innovation helps carriers accelerate fiber broadband deployment, reduces resource accumulation by 30%, and reduces operational costs by 20%.
5G Single Air: as a standardized 5G technology, this invention increases the proportion of 5G inter-RAT spectrum resources shared by 4G from 20% to 90%, achieving the industry’s only millisecond-level dynamic spectrum sharing capability for commercial use. Currently, 26 networks in the world have successfully put it into commercial use.
LinkTurbo and Hyperhold, a device acceleration bundle. With this invention, our smartphones are able to deliver smooth user experience under all network and memory usage conditions.  LinkTurbo significantly improves the concurrent download rate, and reduces game delays and video buffering time, while Hyperhold greatly expands the available memory, improves basic read-write performance.

The announcement came in the context of intellectual property rights, the protection and sharing of which Huawei believes is critical to the tech ecosystem.

“Protecting IP is key to protecting innovation,” said Huawei’s Chief Legal Officer, Song Liuping. “We are eager to license our patents and technologies to share our innovations with the world. This will help broaden the innovation landscape, drive our industry forward, and advance technology for everyone,” he added.

“Huawei is constantly changing itself, and constantly showcasing to the world the value of IP from China,” said Tian Lipu, President of the International Association for the Protection of Intellectual Property’s China Chapter.

By the end of 2021, Huawei held more than 110,000 active patents across over 45,000 patent families. It has more granted patents than any other Chinese company, has filed the most patent applications with the EU Patent Office, and ranked fifth in terms of new patents granted in the United States. For five straight years, Huawei has ranked No. 1 worldwide in terms of Patent Cooperation Treaty applications.

In 1995, Huawei filed its first patent application in China and has since filed numerous applications in countries and regions around the globe, including both the United States and Europe.

Also speaking at the forum, Alan Fan, Head of Huawei’s IPR Department, said the value of Huawei patents has seen wide recognition in the industry, especially in mainstream standards such as cellular technology, Wi-Fi, and audio/video codecs.

“In the past five years, more than two billion smartphones have been licensed to Huawei’s 4G/5G patents. And for cars, about eight million connected vehicles licensed to Huawei patents are being delivered to the consumers every year,” Fan said.

Huawei is also working actively with patent license administration companies in offering “one-stop” licenses for mainstream standards.

“Over 260 companies—accounting for one billion devices—have obtained Huawei’s HEVC patent licenses through a patent pool,” Fan said. He added that the company is in discussions to establish a new patent pool to give the industry “quick access” to Huawei’s patents for Wi-Fi devices worldwide.

Huawei is also discussing joint licensing programs for 5G patents with licensing experts and other leading industry patentees.

This marked the third innovation and IP-themed event Huawei has hosted on its innovation practices. Every year, Huawei invests over 10% of its sales revenue into R&D.

In terms of R&D expenditure, Huawei ranked second in the 2021 EU Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard. In 2021, the company increased its R&D investment to CNY142.7 billion, representing 22.4% of our total revenue. Over the past decade, Huawei’s total R&D investment surpassed CNY845 billion.

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