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Posts Tagged ‘Nokia’

6700 Classic and 6303 Classic handsets by Nokia

Nokia, the world’s largest cell phone making company has constantly lagged behind Sony’s Cyber-shot series and Samsung’s high-end handsets when it comes to camera phones.
Even with its new offerings, the Nokia 6700 Classic and the Nokia 6303 Classic the company does not seem to be making efforts to reverse its fortunes.
Of the two brothers, 6700 [...]

Nokia Acquires Social Networking Software Company Cellity

Finnish mobile phone maker Nokia buys German social networking software maker Cellity. Cellity’s software consolidates and manages addresses from multiple sources such as Outlook, Twitter and other social networking sites.
– Nokia said July 24 it has acquired Cellity, a German social networking
software company that specializes in consolidating address management from
different sources such as a cell phone address book, Outlook, and Twitter and
other social networking services. Terms of the transaction were not discl…


Nokia, LG, Samsung Help Boost Handset Industry, Report Says

ABI Research reports that 269 million handsets shipped in the second quarter of 2009, which “bodes well” for the second half the year. Nokia, LG and Samsung all showed market share growth, while Sony Ericsson, Motorola and RIM saw contractions.
– While the global economy remains stagnant, 269 million mobile
handsets were shipped in the second quarter of 2009, according to ABI
Research.

The figure bodes well for the second half of 2009, according to Jake Saunders, ABI Researchs vice president of forecasting.

“Shipments should bu…


Nokia 6760 Slide for Europe

Nokia has revealed that what is the Nokia Surge for the US will go to Europe and the rest of the world as the Nokia 6760 Slide. The repacked 6760 Slide actually has one major difference compared to the…

Nokia 6760 Slide Cell Phone Arriving in Europe Later This Year

Nokia announced that the Nokia 6760 slide, a near-identical device to the AT T Surge, will arrive in Europe in the third quarter of 2009. The hip slider phone offers quick access to messaging, social networks, Web surfing and all things diverting to the youthful and well connected.
– The Nokia 6760 slide a tweaked version of the AT amp;T Nokia Surge will be making an appearance in Europe during the third quarter of 2009 for approximately $283 before subsidies and taxes, Nokia announced July 21.

The 6760 is a funky slider phone, will a full, four-row qwerty keyboard slid…


Nokia N86 8-Megapixel Smartphone Coming to U.S.

The Nokia N86 8MP smartphone will soon be arriving in the U.S. and joining a growing selection of mobile phones with cameras that give point-and-shoots a run for their money. The Sony-Ericsson c905a Cyber-shot, which arrived in AT T stores July 19, features an 8.1-megapixel camera.
– Nokias flagship imaging device, the N86 8MP, will
be arriving in the United States
in “the coming weeks,” Nokia announced July 17.
Featuring an 8-megapixel camera, Nokia touts the
N86 as a true replacement for a point-and-shoot camera. It features a Carl
Zeiss lens, dual LED flash and a 2.6-in…


Accenture to Buy Nokia`s Symbian Services Unit

Accenture has announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire the professional services unit of Nokia responsible for Symbian customer engineering and customer support.
– Accenture has announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire the
professional services unit of Nokia responsible for Symbian customer
engineering and customer support.
Gary Morgenstern, a spokesman for Accenture, said, quot;The strategic intent
of this acquisition is to accelerate …


Iran boycott for Nokia ‘collaboration’

The mobile phone company Nokia is being hit by a growing economic boycott in Iran as consumers sympathetic to the post-election protest movement begin targeting a string of companies deemed to be collaborating with the regime.

Wholesale vendors in the capital report that demand for Nokia handsets has fallen by as much as half in the wake of calls to boycott Nokia Siemens Networks (NSN) for selling communications monitoring systems to Iran.

There are signs that the boycott is spreading: consumers are shunning SMS messaging in protest at the perceived complicity with the regime by the state telecoms company, TCI. Iran’s state-run broadcaster has been hit by a collapse in advertising as companies fear being blacklisted in a Facebook petition. There is also anecdotal evidence that people are moving money out of state banks and into private banks.

Nokia is the most prominent western company to suffer from its dealings with the Iranian authorities. Its NSN joint venture with Siemens provided Iran with a monitoring system as it expanded a mobile network last year. NSN says the technology is standard issue to dozens of countries, but protesters believe the company could have provided the network without the monitoring function.

Siemens is also accused of providing Iran with an internet filtering system called Webwasher.

“Iranians’ first choice has been Nokia cellphones for several years, partly because Nokia has installed the facility in the country. But in the past weeks, customers’ priority has changed,” said Reza, a mobile phone seller in Tehran’s Big Bazaar.

“Since the news spread that NSN had sold electronic surveillance systems to the Iranian government, people have decided to buy other company’s products although they know that Nokia cellphones function better with network coverage in Iran.”

Some Tehran shops have removed Nokia phones from their window displays. Hashem, another mobile phone vendor, said: “I don’t like to lose my customers and now people don’t feel happy seeing Nokia’s products. We even had customers who wanted to refund their new Nokia cellphones or change them with just another cellphone from any other companies.

“It’s not just a limited case to my shop – I’m also a wholesaler to small shops in provincial markets, and I can say that there is half the demand for Nokia’s product these days in comparison with just one month ago, and it’s really unprecedented. People feel ashamed of having Nokia cellphones,” he added.

News of the boycott has appeared on the front page of Iranian pro-reform papers such as Etemad-e Melli, owned by the reformist candidate Mehdi Karroubi. Hadi Heidari, a prominent Iranian cartoonist, has published an image of a Nokia phone on a No Entry traffic sign.

A Nokia spokeswoman refused to comment on the company’s sales in Iran.

The Iranian authorities are believed to have used Nokia’s mobile phone monitoring system to target dissidents. Released prisoners have revealed that the authorities were keeping them in custody on the basis of their SMS and phone calls archive, which was at officials’ disposal.

One Iranian journalist who has just been released from detention said: “I always had this impression that monitoring calls is just a rumour for threatening us from continuing our job properly, but the nightmare became real when they had my phone calls – conversations in my case.

“And the most unbelievable thing for me is that Nokia sold this system to our government. It would be a reasonable excuse for Nokia if they had sold the monitoring technology to a democratic country for controlling child abuse or other uses, but selling it to the Iranian government with a very clear background of human rights violence and suppression of dissent, it’s just inexcusable for me. I’d like to tell Nokia that I’m tortured because they had sold this damn technology to our government.”

NSN spokesman Ben Roome said: “As in every other country, telecoms networks in Iran require the capability to lawfully intercept voice calls. In the last two years, the number of mobile subscribers in Iran has grown from 12 million to over 53 million, so to expand the network in the second half of 2008 we were required to provide the facility to intercept voice calls on this network.”

In other sectors, state-run TV has also been targeted by protesters who have listed products advertised on its channels and urged supporters to join a boycott. Companies are running scared, and viewers have noticed the number of commercials plummet.

“We don’t have many choices to show and continue our protests. They don’t let us go out, they have killed many, we are threatened to text people or distribute emails, they have summoned people who shout Allahu Akbar ['God is great'] on rooftops at nights, so we need to look for new ways,” said Shahla, a 26-year-old Iranian student.

“I can obviously see on the TV that they are facing an [advertising] crisis. This at least shows them how angry people are,” she added.

The SMS boycott, meanwhile, has apparently forced TCI into drastic price hikes. The cost of an SMS has doubled in recent days. Protesters view the move as a victory.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Apple App Store Hits 1.5 Billion Downloads

The Apple App Store has passed 1.5 billion downloads, Apple announced July 14. Google, Nokia, Microsoft, Palm and BlackBerry are all racing to build their app inventories, but none come close to Apples success. “Its going to be very hard for others to catch up,” said Steve Jobs in a statement.
– Apple has announced that, in just one year, customers have downloaded more than 1.5 billion applications from its App Store. According to Apple, the App Store currently has more than 65,000 apps and more than 100,000 developers in the iPhone Developer Program.

“The App Store is like nothing the…


Nokia’s Surge coming to AT&T July 19th

You know, we could have waited till August to feast our eyes on the Chocolate successor, and if LG had been able to keep this promotional video under wraps for just a few more days, they could have had…

ATandT Targets Social Networkers with Nokia Surge

The Nokia Surge mobile device, running Symbian S60, aims for the sweet spot between a quick messaging phone and a smartphone with multimedia and support for instant messaging, text and e-mail. AT T will offer the Nokia Surge in stores and online.
– Playing to the social networking crowd, AT amp;T plans to offer the Nokia
Surge July 19 in stores and online. The Symbian S60-based smartphone features a
full QWERTY keyboard and a browser with Flash, and supports instant messaging,
text messaging, multimedia messages and e-mail. It allows users …


Nokia 3720 Classic

Nokia has officially announced the 3720 Classic. As we have already seen last week this phone can handle quite a lot. It is waterproof, dustproof and shock resistant. The 3720 is made of very durable materials and the interior is…

Nokia turns to Android in phone wars

Finnish mobile phone giant changes strategy to increase share in the only growing market

Nokia is understood to be developing a mobile phone that runs on Google’s Android software platform in a strategic U-turn for the world’s largest mobile phone manufacturer.

The new touchscreen device will be unveiled at the Nokia World conference in September, say industry insiders, as the Finnish handset giant tries to revive its fortunes in the smartphone market.

Nokia, which makes roughly four out of every 10 mobile phones sold, has been losing out in the market for phones that can access the internet, send emails and download third-party applications, to products such as the Apple iPhone and BlackBerry Storm. The Android software platform, meanwhile, has been gaining ground with over half a dozen handsets expected to be available by the end of the year.

Analysts at HSBC reckon Nokia had 47% of the global smartphone market in 2007; that was down to 35% last summer and 31% at the end of the year.

The smartphone segment is critical as it is the only part of the mobile phone market which is growing. Cash-strapped consumers are either holding on to their existing phones and opting for cheaper SIM-only deals or “trading up” to more advanced gadgets such as the iPhone.

Opting to use Android, an “open source” platform that any software developer can access, is a reversal of the company’s previous strategy in mobile phone software.

A year ago, Nokia bought out the partners in its Symbian mobile software joint venture and announced plans to make its products free of charge to other manufacturers in an attempt to see off the threat posed by Android and the iPhone.

But the response to the opening of Symbian has been relatively muted. By contrast, users of the iPhone have already downloaded over a billion applications in just nine months and Android has attracted a host of developers offering their “widgets”, or applications, to consumers through the Android Marketplace.

Gadget fans have already hacked one of Nokia’s existing devices, the N810 internet tablet, so it can run the Android system but the new device is expected to fully integrate the Android platform.

There has also been speculation that Nokia is looking to extend its smartphone range as a result of its recent deal to collaborate with chip giant Intel. Nokia was unavailable for comment, however.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


iPhone overtaking Nokia in mobile ads

Nokia has lost its overall market share leadership in the worldwide smartphone segment to Apple in mobile ads share, BNET Technology reports. According to statistics from AdMob, Apple’s iPhone received 49 percent of ad traffic in May, compared with 32 percent for Nokia.

Why is mobile ad share important? Because in the smartphone segment, the tail [...]

Nokia 3720 Waterproof and Dustproof Phone Coming Out in September

We’ve seen yesterday that the Nokia N97 is not exactly a waterproof phone although it can deal pretty good with water. If you want a waterproof phone you should wait for Nokia’s first, the 3720 which is coming out…

Nokia N97 Mini on Its Way Soon?

We heard earlier this week that Vodafone Ireland could sell a different N97 version dubbed as the Mini. The phone should be cheaper than the already launched N97 and you can expect it not to have the same cool…