Verizon Nokia Lumia Icon gets official: first-impressions

Verizon has refilled its Windows Phone flagship spot, with the Nokia Lumia Icon distilling what we liked from the Lumia 1520 into a 5-inch form-factor with a crisp metal chassis … Continue reading

Nokia’s Mighty Lumia Icon Is Like a Pocket Photo Studio

Nokia’s Mighty Lumia Icon Is Like a Pocket Photo Studio

With a 20-megapixel image sensor, one-handed zoom, and a quartet of directional microphones that filter out background noise, the Nokia Lumia Icon looks to be another solid entry in Nokia’s lineup of great shooters.

    



Nokia Lumia Icon: No Time For a Review, But the Box It Came In Is Nuts

Nokia Lumia Icon: No Time For a Review, But the Box It Came In Is Nuts

Well this is was an interesting mail call. Nokia just delivered the Lumia Icon to our doorstep, and while we weren’t given enough time to do a proper review before Nokia’s embargo lifted—that’s coming later this week—the glowing red $150 armored case it came in sure is something!

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Nokia Rumored To Launch Multiple Android Devices This Year

Nokia Rumored To Launch Multiple Android Devices This YearWe guess by now everyone has learnt that Nokia could be set to debut an Android phone of their own come MWC 2014. It’s an interesting move considering that Microsoft will be acquiring the company, but then again we guess it could be like the case of the Nokia N9 which was Nokia’s first and last MeeGo efforts, and in a way a swan song before they are bought out by Microsoft. That being said, reports from the Chinese media have suggested that the Nokia Normandy/Nokia X will not be the Finnish company’s first and last Android efforts, but would actually be the first of several Android handsets the company has planned for the rest of the year.

According to the reports, the Nokia Normandy is a low-end Android device (as expected based on its specs) and that Nokia has plans for higher-end Android devices that could be released sometime in the May-June timeframe. The report cites inside sources from Artesyn Technologies, whom Nokia is one of their clients as the company deals with design, manufacturing and sales of embedded board solutions and power conversion for networking. Like we said the fact that Nokia could be going ahead with the Nokia Normandy is pretty interesting given their situation at the moment, but for them to release more Android devices? Take it with a grain of salt for now but what do you guys think?

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  • Nokia Rumored To Launch Multiple Android Devices This Year original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    WSJ: An Android-Powered Nokia Phone Clad In Windows Phone Clothing Coming Later This Month

    lumia-520-front-tiles-cp

    Rumours that primary Windows Phone OEM Nokia has been two-timing Microsoft by keeping an Android phone project on its backburner have been doing the rounds for a while now (aka the rumoured Nokia Normandy device). But yesterday the Wall Street Journal tipped more fuel on this fire, citing “people familiar with the matter” confirming that Nokia will unveil an Android powered device at the Mobile World Congress tradeshow in Barcelona later this month.

    Now there’s plenty of WTF here. Not least because Nokia is about to hand over its mobile making division to Windows Phone maker Microsoft in exchange for a substantial pile of cash (€5.44 billion/$7.2 billion). So why would Microsoft, which has its own mobile platform, sanction its soon to be mobile making division to build an Android-powered device?

    On the surface, it sounds like madness. And yet, as others have previously speculated, there is potentially method to this madness — being as Windows Phone has failed to challenge Android’s reach at the lower end of the smartphone market.

    The bottom-of-the-range $180 Lumia 520 (pictured at the top of this post), which was announced at last year’s MWC conference and has sold relatively well for a Windows Phone, is still a ways more pricey than the least expensive Droids (sub-$50 Android handsets are available in emerging markets).

    Ergo, switching to Android for budget devices would be one way for Microsoft to slice itself a larger portion of a very large (and growing) chunk of the smartphone pie.

    If the best traction for Windows Phone has been at the lower end price-point, then pushing that lower still could be a winning combination — even if the resulting phones won’t technically be Windows Phones. Yet they will look and taste like Windows Phones, spreading the flavour of Microsoft’s mobile OS further than it’s thus far been able to go.

    The Android powered Nokia device the WSJ’s sources discuss would come preloaded with Microsoft (and Nokia) services, including a Nokia Android app store, rather than Google software and Google’s Play store — effectively making it a Trojan horse pushed inside the Android fortress to ‘on-ramp’ first time smartphone users.

    Or a plucky landing on the shores of occupied territory, if you will.

    The device would also not resemble vanilla Android in terms of its UI, but would rather be a fork of Android — just as Amazon has forked Android for its Kindle Fire tablets and to further its own ends, not Google’s — with Nokiasoft apparently dressing the interface to make it look like Windows Phone.

    Doing that would mean the budget Droid could acclimatize first time smartphone users to a Windows Phone world — i.e. in the hopes they will upgrade to a full-fat Windows Phone Lumia smartphone in the fullness of time.

    According to the WSJ, Nokia engineers have been developing the Android device before agreeing to sell its mobile making division to Microsoft last fall. But up to now it hasn’t been clear whether Nokia planned to move ahead with the project or not.

    The newspaper’s sources confirm the handset will be unveiled later this month — so presumably the project has been okayed by Microsoft’s new CEO Satya Nadella.

    Nokia is holding a press conference at MWC, where TC will be on hand to cover the news. (Albeit, Nokia’s understated invite for this event isn’t giving away any Droid-flavoured hints:)

    Nokia MWC press invite

    It’s not clear whether the Normandy Android landing is a stop-gap strategy while Microsoft retools Windows Phone for even lower prices smartphones. But the WSJ says Microsoft will be refocusing WP attention on flagship smartphones, to better compete at the higher end. (Yeah, good luck with that…)

    At its earning call last month, Nokia — the only substantial Windows Phone OEM (controlling 90% of the market according to AdDuplex) — revealed it sold a total of just 30 million Lumia devices during in the whole of 2013.

    Compare that to Android’s vast sprawl: Google announced 900M active Android activations in May last year. And cumulative active Android activations are likely to break the billion mark this year as the platform continues to expand to new device types to fuel further growth.

    With comparative numbers like those it’s not hard to see Microsoft’s logic in signing off a Windows Phone-flavoured Android-powered low end smartphone Trojan horse.

    Windows Phone certainly needs a better growth strategy. Some might say it needs a growth strategy period. And, ironically, piggybacking on Android may be the best way to achieve that elusive momentum.

    At the time of writing Nokia had not responded to a request for comment. Update: A Nokia spokeswoman declined to comment, saying Nokia doesn’t comment on market rumour and speculation.

    Nokia RM-1013 Could Be The Company’s Cheapest Phone To Date

    Nokia RM 1013 Could Be The Companys Cheapest Phone To DateNokia has been known for putting out cheap and affordable handsets, from back in the day of the feature phone, to today where their low-end Lumia smartphones have proven to be their best seller. That being said, it looks like Nokia might have their cheapest smartphone in the works, thanks to a listing on Indian importation record, Zauba. The listing reveals a phone going by the model number Nokia RM-1013 which appears to be a Windows Phone device. It was also listed as being priced at INR 6,282 which when converted, is around $100. Imagine that, a handset so cheap and fully unlocked! If Nokia did not already dominate with the Lumia 520, we can only imagine that this handset will be a hit in emerging markets.

    However in terms of specifications, not much is known about the device, but then again for a handset priced at around $100, don’t expect anything amazing. The device should be more than capable of getting the job done and then some. Microsoft had previously revealed their intentions of maintaining Windows Phone in both the high and low end markets, so with this handset, it looks like Nokia will be doing that for them ahead of the acquisition which is rumored to be closed at MWC 2014.

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  • Nokia RM-1013 Could Be The Company’s Cheapest Phone To Date original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Let’s be realistic about Nokia’s Android plans

    It’s easy to get excited about the idea of Nokia adopting Android. Ever since the company first announced plans to shift from Symbian to Windows Phone in early 2011, many … Continue reading

    Nokia Android Phone Release Later This Month [Report]

    Nokia Android Phone Release Later This Month [Report]

    For the past couple of months we have been hearing a lot of rumors about Nokia working on an Android smartphone. At one point it was even rumored that Microsoft was pressuring the Finnish company into giving up this project primarily because in the near future, its hardware division is officially going to be a part of Redmond. Nokia seems to have went ahead anyway, with The Wall Street Journal running with a story today, claiming to have heard from people familiar with the matter that the Nokia Android phone is going to be released this month.

    (more…)

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  • Nokia Android Phone Release Later This Month [Report] original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Nokia Android phone tipped without Google

    It would seem that the elusive Nokia Android smartphone has been tipped as close to release this week, with a full collection of Microsoft and Nokia-created apps inside instead of … Continue reading

    Nokia Rumored To Announce New Hardware Brand

    Nokia Rumored To Announce New Hardware BrandBack in September last year, Microsoft announced that they would be acquiring Nokia’s cellphone business for a cool $7.17 billion. The deal is expected to conclude sometime this year and according to one of NPU’s tipsters, they have suggested that the deal could be officially closed around the time MWC 2014 kicks off, which is towards the end of this month. The deal was originally supposed to be closed when Nokia’s Q4 results were announced, but it looks like that did not happen.

    Interestingly enough, NPU’s sources have also revealed that after the deal has been officially closed, Nokia could make a new announcement in which a new hardware brand could be revealed. We have heard how Nokia has plans for wearables, a smartwatch to be exact, which could be launched as soon as 2014, and that this new brand that Nokia is planning on announcing will be related to Nokia’s smartwatch efforts. That should be pretty interesting as we’re sure many are wondering what Nokia will be getting up to once they sell off their handset division to Microsoft. In any case take it with a grain of salt for now, but with MWC 2014 around the corner, we guess we might not have to wait too long to see if the rumors pan out.

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  • Nokia Rumored To Announce New Hardware Brand original content from Ubergizmo.