Engadget Live: Join us at 4AM ET for an ‘ask me anything’ Q&A with Nokia CEO Stephen Elop!

Engadget Live Join us at 4AM ET for an 'ask me anything' Q&A with Nokia CEO Stephen Elop!

You may have since forgotten, but today was the original kick-off day for Nokia World 2012. With the big show canceled and the devices already launched, we instead opted to drop by the smartphone maker’s headquarters just outside Helsinki. We’re spending three days here in Finland, meeting with executives to get an inside look at the company’s next-generation smartphone lineup. Our first face-to-face is with Nokia’s chief executive himself, Stephen Elop, who has generously offered up 30 minutes to answer your questions. Because of the time constraints, we won’t be able to accommodate every request, but we’ll certainly do our best.

There are two ways to submit your questions: leave a comment below, or you can send us a tweet @EngadgetLive — once the session begins, we’ll only be able to accept messages through Twitter, and you’re welcome to ask questions before we start and as a follow-up to Stephen’s responses, as well. In order to accommodate the largest possible audience, we’ll be using our liveblog tool to post both questions and answers, so bookmark this page and hop on over there at 4AM Eastern tomorrow. As always, you’ll also find the local time just below. Now about those questions…

September 25, 2012 4:00 AM EDT

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Engadget Live: Join us at 4AM ET for an ‘ask me anything’ Q&A with Nokia CEO Stephen Elop! originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Sep 2012 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia’s Damian Dinning goes in-depth on phase two of PureView for the Lumia 920 (video)

Nokias Damian Dinning goes indepth on phase two of PureView for the Lumia 920 video

Nokia’s imaging chief Damian Dinning has released a paper explaining the “second phase” of PureView technology that’s included in the new Lumia 920. Charged with improving low-light photography and eliminating camera shake, the experimental 808 handset was developed with a 41-megapixel sensor that oversampled images down to 5-megapixels. However, such equipment is bulky and expensive, so it changed tack for its second crack at the whip, which you can find out about if you join us after the break.

Continue reading Nokia’s Damian Dinning goes in-depth on phase two of PureView for the Lumia 920 (video)

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Nokia’s Damian Dinning goes in-depth on phase two of PureView for the Lumia 920 (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Sep 2012 13:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Vringo buys small Nokia patent portfolio as asset sell-off continues

Vringo buys Nokia wireless patent portfolio as asset selloff continues

Nokia’s sale of the century hour continues, selling off a small intellectual property portfolio to Vringo. The little-known app maker has snapped up a bundle of 500 patents and applications from the Finnish phone maker, including 109 issued US Patents. The collection mostly concerns backbone tech, including communication management, signal transmission and cellular infrastructure. Neither company mentioned a figure, but Vringo revealed that Nokia’s getting a chunk of any future profits made. There’s PR after the break if you’re curious enough to wonder if Stephen Elop’s planning the mobile phone equivalent of a yard sale.

Continue reading Vringo buys small Nokia patent portfolio as asset sell-off continues

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Vringo buys small Nokia patent portfolio as asset sell-off continues originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Aug 2012 09:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia’s Q2 2012 financials: 4 million Lumias sold, $1.01 billion dollar loss

STUB Nokia's Q2 2012 announced

The past three months haven’t been the best for Finland’s former world number one. It hasn’t been helped by the three biggest credit agencies lowering the company’s bond rating to “junk,” and the Lumia 900’s violently slashed price. Unfortunately the latest results reveal continuing gloom: the manufacturer made an operating loss of $1.01 billion dollars for the quarter. The company managed to make €7.5 billion in sales ($9.2 billion, down .5 billion since the last quarter), shifting four million Lumia handsets in the process. In fact, the only cause for optimism is that sales of the Lumia range have roughly doubled each quarter.

The number of handsets pushed out the door increased (thanks to the Asha range of budget phones) with the company selling 73 million phones. That said, the company has clearly failed to crack America, selling a paltry 600,000 handsets in the States. The cash pile has also continued to dwindle, with the piggybank currently standing at €4.1 billion ($5.1 billion), down from $6.3 billion in Q1, despite getting a further $250 million in kickbacks from Microsoft. Unsurprisingly, the prediction for the third quarter of the year was similarly dour, summed up rather euphemistically as “difficult.”

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Nokia’s Q2 2012 financials: 4 million Lumias sold, $1.01 billion dollar loss originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Jul 2012 06:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How would you change the Nokia Lumia 710?

How would you change

While Nokia’s Lumia 710 may have been imagined as the Jan Brady of the Lumia line, this supposedly awkward middle child does plenty of things right. In fact, for everyone outside of the smartphone hardcore, it’ll serve you very well at a far lower price than the better-looking (yet similarly specced) 800. That said, does it really need to exist? Would you pick this over the cheaper 610, the better designed 800 or the LTE-packing 900? That’s the question we’re asking you today — if you were bending Stephen Elop‘s ear off about his trials and triumphs, what would you say about the 710, and more importantly, what would you change?

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How would you change the Nokia Lumia 710? originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 15 Jul 2012 22:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia chairman says company has a Windows Phone ‘contingency plan’ after all

Nokia chairman says company has a Windows Phone 'contingency plan' after all

So much for no plan B. A little less than a year after Nokia US’ Chris Weber proclaimed rather bluntly, “the reality is if we are not successful with Windows Phone, it doesn’t matter what we do,” Nokia’s chairman Risto Siilasmaa reportedly said in an interview that the company does, indeed, have a “contingency plan,” should Windows Phone 8 falter. What precisely such a plan might entail, however, we’re not really sure. Still, the F-Secure founder naturally remains positive about the future of Microsoft’s mobile operating — and Nokia head honcho Stephen Elop, whose leadership has been “good and transparent,” according to Siilasmaa.

Nokia chairman says company has a Windows Phone ‘contingency plan’ after all originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Jul 2012 09:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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