Saturday, 27 September 2014



Nokia launched the Nokia 3310 in late 2000 as the successor of the Nokia 3210. It has become one of the most popular devices of all time. The Nokia 1100 handset in 2003, shipping over 200 million units, is the best-selling mobile phone of all time and the world's top-selling consumer electronics product, and contributed to the company's rise in developing markets. Nokia was one of the first to recognize the market opportunity in combining a game console and a mobile phone (both of which many gamers were carrying in 2003) into the N-Gage. The N-Gage was a mobile phone and game console meant to lure gamers away from the Game Boy Advance, though it cost twice as much.

Nokia Productions was the first mobile filmmaking project directed by Spike Lee. Work began in April 2008, and the film premiered in October 2008.

In 2009, the company reentered the personal computing market, announcing a high-end Windows-based netbook called the Nokia Booklet 3G. The company also entered the smartphone market.

Symbian OS
Symbian was Nokia's main smartphone operating system until 2011.

Symbian was popular among the smartphone market during the 2000s. Some popular Symbian-powered devices include the Nokia 7650, the first S60 smartphone; Nokia N-Gage the first game-centric smartphone; Nokia 6600, the first Symbian smartphone to sold over a million unit with a soap-like design; Nokia 7610, the first Nokia with a megapixel camera; Nokia 6630 the first 3G Nokia smartphone; Nokia N90, the first camera-centric phone; Nokia N95, a popular slider; Nokia N82, with Xenon flash; Nokia E71, offering a full "qwerty" keyboard and premium build; Nokia 5800 XpressMusic the first full-touch smartphone; Nokia N97 with full-touchscreen and a side-sliding QWERTY keyboard; Nokia X6 the first capacitive touchscreen and the Nokia N8 with the newer Symbian^3 and 12 megapixel camera.

Linux devices
The 2012 Nokia 808 PureView had a record 41-megapixel camera, and represented the end of the Symbian platform after its replacement by Windows Phone.

Nokia's first Linux devices were the Nokia Internet tablets and the Nokia N900, which ran Debian-based Maemo.

The Maemo project later merged with Intel's Moblin to create MeeGo.[63] The Nokia N9 was released before the project was abandoned in favour of Windows Phone. Development continued under the name Sailfish OS.[64][65]

The Nokia X family of devices running Android was Nokia's final sally in Linux-based smartphones.

Series 40
Series 40 is a phone platform used in feature phones, mainly running Java-based applications. It was once the world's most popular software of mobile phones.

Nokia acquired Smarterphone, a company making the Smarterphone OS for low end phones and merged it with Series 40 to form the Asha Platform, which also inherits some UI characteristics from Nokia's MeeGo platform. The Asha 501 was the first phone running the new OS.

Reorganizations
Nokia opened its Komárom, Hungary mobile phone factory on 5 May 2000.

In March 2007, Nokia signed a memorandum with Cluj County Council, Romania to open a plant near the city in Jucu commune. Moving the production from the Bochum, Germany factory to a low wage country created an uproar in Germany. Nokia later moved its North American Headquarters to Sunnyvale, California.

In April 2003, the troubles of the networks equipment division caused the corporation to resort to similar streamlining practices, including layoffs and organizational restructuring. This diminished Nokia's public image in Finland and produced a number of court cases and an episode of a documentary television show critical of Nokia.
In June 2006, CEO Jorma Ollila left his position to become the chairman of Royal Dutch Shell and to give way for Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo.

In 2008, Nokia exited mobile phone distribution in Japan.

In 2009, Check Point acquired Nokia's network security business unit.

In February 2012, Nokia announced 4,000 lay-offs to move manufacturing from Europe and Mexico to Asia.

In March 2012, Nokia laid off 1,000 employees from its Salo, Finland factory to focus on software. In June 2012, research facilities in Ulm, Germany and Burnaby, Canada closed, costing more jobs. The company also announced 10,000 lay-offs globally by the end of 2013.

In January 2013, Nokia terminated 1,000 employees from its IT, production and logistics divisions. The company planned to transfer about 715 jobs to subcontractors.

Acquisitions
For a more comprehensive list, see List of acquisitions by Nokia.
The Nokia E55 from the business segment of the Eseries range

On 22 September 2003, Nokia acquired Sega.com, a branch of Sega to develop the Nokia N-Gage device.

On 16 November 2005, Nokia agreed to acquire Intellisync Corporation, a provider of data and PIM synchronization software, completing the acquisition on 10 February 2006.

On 19 June 2006, Nokia and Siemens AG announced the companies would merge their mobile and fixed-line phone network equipment businesses, creating Nokia Siemens Networks. Each company has a 50% stake in the infrastructure company, headquartered in Espoo, Finland. About 20,000 Nokia employees transferred to this new company.

On 8 August 2006, Nokia agreed to acquire online music distributor Loudeye Corporation for approximately US$60 million.

In July 2007, Nokia acquired all assets of Twango, a comprehensive media sharing solution for organizing and sharing photos, videos and other personal media.

In September 2007, Nokia agreed to acquire Enpocket, a supplier of mobile advertising technology and services.

In 2007, Nokia agreed to acquire Navteq, a U.S.-based supplier of digital mapping data, for $8.1 billion and finalized the acquisition on 10 July 2008.

In September 2008, Nokia acquired OZ Communications, a privately held company with approximately 220 employees headquartered in Montreal, Canada.

On 24 July 2009, Nokia agreed to acquire certain assets of Cellity, a privately owned mobile software company, completed on 5 August 2009.

In September 2009, Nokia acquired certain assets of Plum Ventures, Inc to complement Nokia's Social Location services.

In March 2010, Nokia acquired Novarra, a mobile web browser firm.

In April 2010, Nokia acquired MetaCarta, a local search technology firm.
In 2012, Nokia acquired Smarterphone, a developer of an operating system for feature phones, and the imaging company Scalado.

Awards and Accolades
In 2011, The Brand Trust Report, India Study, awarded Nokia as India's Most Trusted Brand. The study was conducted by TRA Research, a leading brand analytics company. Nokia also received the Most Trusted Brand in India accolade in the year 2012 and 2013. However Nokia's ranking on The Brand Trust Report fell in 2014 to India's fifth Most Trusted Brand.

2013: New products, recovering market share, lack of profits
In January 2013, Nokia reported 6.6 million smartphone sales for Q4 2012 consisting of 2.2 million Symbian and 4.4 million sales of Lumia devices (Windows Phone 7 and 8). In North America, only 700,000 mobile phones have been sold including smartphones.

In May 2013 Nokia released the Asha platform for its low-end borderline smartphone devices. The Verge commented that this may be a recognition on the part of Nokia that they are unable to move Windows Phone into the bottom end of smartphone devices fast enough and may be "hedging their commitment" to the Windows Phone platform.

In the same month, Nokia announced its partnership with the world's largest cellular operator China Mobile to offer Nokia's new Windows-based phone, the Lumia 920, as Lumia 920T, an exclusive Chinese variant. The partnership was a bid by Nokia to connect with China Mobile's 700 million-person customer base.

Following the second quarter of 2013, Nokia made an operating loss of €115m (£98.8m), with revenues falling 24% to €5.7bn, despite sales figures for the Lumia exceeding those of BlackBerry's handsets during the same period. Over the nine-quarters prior to the second quarter of 2013, Nokia sustained €4.1 billion worth of operating losses. The company experienced particular problems in both China and the U.S.; in the former, Nokia's handset revenues are the lowest since 2002, while in the U.S., Francisco Jeronimo, analyst for research company IDC, stated: "Nokia continues to show no signs of recovery in the US market. High investments, high expectations, low results."

In July 2013, Nokia announced that Lumia sales were 7.4 million for the second quarter of the year – a record high


Tuesday, 23 September 2014

Nokia

Its Nokia Networks subsidiary provides telecommunications network equipment and services. Its wholly owned subsidiary HERE provides free-of-charge digital map information and navigation services.

As of 2013, Nokia employed 90,000 people across 120 countries, conducts sales in more than 150 countries and reported annual revenues of around €12.7 billion. Nokia is a public limited-liability company listed on the Helsinki Stock Exchange and New York Stock Exchange. It is the world's 274th-largest company measured by 2013 revenues according to the Fortune Global 500.

In September 2013, Nokia sold what was once the world's largest vendor of mobile phones to Microsoft as part of an overall deal totaling €5.44 billion (US$7.17 billion). Stephen Elop, Nokia's former CEO, and several other executives joined the new Microsoft Mobile subsidiary of Microsoft as part of the deal, which closed on 25 April 2014.