The N1 tablet runs Nokia’s software on top of the Google operating system, Sebastian Nystrom, head of products at Nokia, said at the Slush technology conference in Helsinki today. The device is made and sold by Foxconn Technology Group and costs $249 plus tax. Sales will start in China in the first quarter and Nokia expects the N1 to be available in other markets.
The tablet is the latest twist in 149-year-old Nokia’s history that’s includes transformations from one industry to another. Chief Executive Officer Rajeev Suri, who took over in May after Nokia sold the money-losing mobile-phone unit to Microsoft for about $7.5 billion, is expanding beyond wireless-network equipment, which now accounts for about 90 percent of
the Espoo, Finland-based company’s sales.
“We wanted to start with something small that caters to our fans,” Nystrom said in an interview. “We continue to believe there is room for better products out there.”
Nokia shares rose 1.8 percent to 6.32 euros at 12:53 p.m. in Helsinki. The stock has gained 5.3 percent this year, giving Nokia a market value of 23.6 billion euros ($30 billion).
Aluminum Body
The N1 has a 7.9-inch (20-centimeter) screen and aluminum body. It includes an Intel Corp. processor and the Lollipop version of Android. On top of that, it runs Nokia’s Z Launcher interface software, which predicts and highlights the apps consumers are likely to want based on time of day and location.Foxconn will be responsible for manufacturing, distribution and sales. It’ll also handle customer care, including liabilities and warranty costs, as well as software licensing and contracts with third parties. Nokia is licensing the brand, industrial design, Z Launcher software and intellectual property to Foxconn.
When agreeing to sell its phone unit to Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft, Nokia said it would be restricted from licensing its brand for use in connection with mobile-device sales for 30 months and from using the Nokia brand on Nokia’s own mobile devices until the end of 2015.
A Microsoft representative in London didn’t immediately have a comment.
Nokia agreed to sell the phone division last year after racking up losses of more than 5 billion euros over nine quarters. Once the No. 1 smartphone maker with a market share topping 50 percent, Nokia dropped outside the top five in recent years as Apple Inc.’s iPhone and phones using Android software gained dominance.
The company has three businesses left after the phone-unit sale: the networks division, its maps business, and a research and development unit which is responsible for licensing its patents.
No comments:
Post a Comment