blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Technology News

 

Nokia unveils new smartphones to rival iPhone
Posted: 03 September 2009 0510 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 
Related News
Nokia plans to launch mobile 'banking'
Nokia plans to launch mini laptop PC


HELSINKI: Nokia, the world's leading mobile phone maker, unveiled on Wednesday three new smartphones as the Finnish firm tries to claw back market share from Apple's popular iPhone and RiM's Blackberry.

The three new Nokia phones, two of which feature touch screens, are scheduled to be in stores during the fourth quarter of 2009 as Nokia increasingly focuses on applications and services.

"Nokia aims at reaching the many, not the few, with our rich portfolio of services. We are doing this through an increasing number of open partnerships with world leaders in many fields," chief executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo said in a statement.

Nokia is the world's largest maker of smartphones, with 45 per cent of the market in the second quarter, but its product line has been seen as ageing as Canada's RiM and Apple have snatched market share with more advanced models.

The new Nokia N97 mini will have a touch display and will feature the Lifecasting with Ovi application, enabling users to update their account on the Facebook social networking site with their cell phone.

Meanwhile the Nokia X6 and X3 will update the Finnish company's music phone selection.

In recent weeks Nokia has also launched a mini laptop "Booklet 3G" and the N900 smartphone, and announced that Microsoft Office software will be available on Nokia smartphones as of next year.

But while analysts said Nokia was moving in the right direction, they do not expect the new devices to have a big impact on profitability this year.

"It is not likely that there will be much impact from this in terms of sales or profitability during the remainder of this year, but it will be visible next year," FIM Bank analyst Michael Schroeder told AFP.

"Time will tell how Nokia can turn these (new products) into sales and how consumers will accept them," he said.

Analysts said that while big scale was to Nokia's benefit, it had its disadvantages too.

"Nokia has to think about large volumes and it cannot make changes that quickly. And its Symbian S60 (smartphone) user interface is not very modern," Pohjola Bank analyst Hannu Rauhala said.

Schroeder also criticised the Symbian user interface as outdated and complex and said he considered the N900 smartphone, running the new Linux Maemo platform, the most interesting of Nokia's new products.

Nokia's sales have been sliding since the third quarter of 2008 and it has boosted its profitability by slashing costs and reducing its workforce by some 4,000.

In July Nokia reported a second-quarter net profit down by 66 per cent on a 12-month basis to 380 million euros (541 million dollars). - AFP/de

 


Other technology News
Apple to debut "iPad 3" in March: report
Privacy group sues to stop Google policy change
Windows 8 preview set for February 29
Amazon tests e-commerce waters in India
Nokia cuts 4,000 jobs in struggle to win smartphone market
Beijing issues ultimatum for microblog users
Apple's iPhone hot but Android handsets on fire
Outrage over Steve Jobs angel in Taiwan ad
Faceless despite Facebook is still the choice for many
Facebook seeks to raise US$5b in IPO
Silicon Valley braces for Facebook millionaires
African tablet to rival iPad?
Thailand welcomes Twitter censorship tool
Twitter faces censorship charges, blackout call
Symantec urges users to disable pcAnywhere

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions