­It’s Just Another Smartphone Factory™

In a very typical stereotype, the campus in Shenzhen for Huawei has around 30,000 employees over 2.5 square kilometers, with some of them located in housing nearby within the local area. Perhaps quite interesting is that there are Foxconn offices across road, to the extent that at one T-junction there was a sign for left saying ‘Foxconn’ and a sign for the right saying ‘Huawei’. It has been noted that Foxconn has manufactured products for Huawei before, and thus I can imagine being so close to each other has its own benefits.

Make sure you make the right turn

Needless to say, a campus this size is very difficult to ‘tour’ around, especially as we had special presentations and meetings with the President of Huawei’s watch division discussing the Huawei Watch, lunch with the Director of Global Relations as well as a tour of the testing facilities during the short time there.

The standard rules apply for a company of this nature – there are tall corporate buildings with product areas and descriptive walkthroughs of what the company does, with professional meeting rooms that have in-house catering, whereas the technical offices and data center management are generic looking concrete places that are mostly no-go areas for media visits. This dichotomy between ‘on-show corporate’ and ‘the general workforce’ is mirrored in companies around the world, to the extent that we also had lunch in a special canteen for guests with a background band as you entered.

Musical accompaniment in the executive dining hall reception

During lunch we ate and talked with the Director for Public Relations, rather than eating in the casual employee canteen and experiencing the potential mêlée that comes with that. However, the campus is designed with an element of beauty in mind, under the premise that the CEO has a degree in architecture, and wanted the campus to reflect an element of style rather than be another box hidden in a corporate mountain. It was at this point that it was suggested by Andrei that the ultimate tech press clickbait article would be ‘An In-Depth Look at Huawei’s Architecture’ and it being about the buildings and landscapes of the campus, rather than insights into the company's silicon or devices.

Part of the tour was also to one of the smartphone testing laboratories, although we were not allowed to take images inside of the facilities. If any of our readers have seen our articles in the past about this (such as ASUS), the usual array of drop tests, twisting tests, insertion, vibration, high temperature, low temperature, humidity cycles and battery presses were also present on site, although RF testing is performed on a different campus than the one we visited. So when this page started with ‘It’s Just Another Smartphone Factory’, the reality is that almost all of them are like this, as they all need to perform similar tests dictated international and industry standards. The key here is individualization - most of the key elements to what a company does with their product is in the hardware design stage or software, rather than product testing, unless water/dust resistance is a key factor, or additional MIL-SPEC (military standard) is needed. Even then, for MIL-SPEC, one would assume that the testing would be outsourced if it only applied to a few devices, rather than purchasing all the equipment.

Why We Went It’s Just Another Smartphone Manufacturer™
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  • Ian Cutress - Friday, December 4, 2015 - link

    I don't know why 'white' was in there. Removed.
  • 0iron - Sunday, December 6, 2015 - link

    That's explained why 'a elephant' rather than 'an elephant' is (still) in the article
  • V900 - Friday, December 4, 2015 - link

    I'm surprised and quite disappointed that you didn't bring up Huawei's (supposedly) close ties to the Chinese military-industrial complex and the PLA.

    I'm not talking about a confrontational interview or an expose, but at least ask.

    You might not have gotten a satisfactory answer, but you owe your readers that much, and it would have lifted it above the fluffy factory tour-angle, that you're clearly trying to rise above.

    And for anybody who thinks that bringing this is up is "too political" or "irrelevant, doesn't have anything to do with technology" they really need to get with the times, since Anandtech deals with privacy issues on a regular basis.

    It's also extremely relevant, since Huawei's (again: supposed) ties to the PLA is the very reason why using their hardware is out of the question for many network administrators and IT buyers.

    (IT buyers as in buying network infrastructure for 1000 workstations spread out over three locations. Not IT buyer as in "I just bought a Mate2")
  • Communism - Saturday, December 5, 2015 - link

    Why would any foreign nations waste time and money putting backdoors in their private company's network infrastructure products when they can just use the gapingly huge backdoors that the US government conveniently requires to be put into all the devices and services US companies sell?
  • s.yu - Saturday, December 5, 2015 - link

    Looks like you haven't heard of TOR, good like finding a backdoor there.
  • Communism - Saturday, December 5, 2015 - link

    Hmm, seems like operation earnest voice is in the house.

    Tor is 100% US government funded and developed, with the vast majority of the exit nodes being US government intercepted/funded.

    Man in the middle attacks are the US's thing.
  • s.yu - Sunday, December 6, 2015 - link

    It's US funded, but it's out of the government's control. You never heard of terrorists using it??
  • Communism - Sunday, December 6, 2015 - link

    You mean al-CIAda and ISISreal?

    Saudi America gotta look out for it's friends ofc.
  • Beany2013 - Tuesday, December 8, 2015 - link

    "You mean al-CIAda and ISISreal"

    Yeah, was pretty sure you were worth ignoring. Seems I'm right.
  • s.yu - Tuesday, December 8, 2015 - link

    Wow, you're an interesting nut. This is a new level of communist brainwashing I'm not familiar with!

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