Nokia Q2 2012: 4m Lumia shipped but $1bn operating loss

Nokia has announced its Q2 2012 financial results, with the beleaguered company reporting shipments of 4m Lumia Windows Phones and net sales up slightly on the previous quarter. Net sales hit €7.5bn ($9.22bn), up €0.1bn from Q1, while mobile phones volumes overall rose to 73m units. However, operating loss hit €826m ($1bn).

2012 has not been a good year for Nokia. The Finnish company saw its long-standing position at the top of the mobile ladder stolen out from under it by Samsung, with adoption of Lumia Windows Phones sluggish at the top end, and Nokia’s entry-level range under heavy attack from cheap Android devices in developing markets.

Windows Phone 8 represents another opportunity for Nokia to recover, with the next-gen version of the platform already shaping up to be considerably improved as well as tightening integration between the smartphone OS and Windows 8 on the desktop thanks to a shared kernel. However, that advance comes at a cost: existing Windows Phone 7 devices, including the entirety of Nokia’s existing line-up, won’t get an upgrade to Windows Phone 8, instead getting a partial tweak with the new UI but none of the more impressive underlying features.

Meanwhile, Nokia has also suffered by not having its own piece in the tablet ecosystem, the company holding off until – as CEO Stephen Elop has previously said – it can bring something new to the marketplace. That could involve Windows 8 or its ARM-centric sibling Windows RT, though like Windows Phone 8 they’re not expected until Q4 this year.

Stephen Elop statement on Q2:

“Nokia is taking action to manage through this transition period. While Q2 was a difficult quarter, Nokia employees are demonstrating their determination to strengthen our competitiveness, improve our operating model and carefully manage our financial resources.

We shipped four million Lumia Smartphones in Q2, and we plan to provide updates to current Lumia products over time, well beyond the launch of Windows Phone 8. We believe the Windows Phone 8 launch will be an important catalyst for Lumia. During the quarter, we demonstrated stability in our feature phone business, and enhanced our competitiveness with the introduction of our first full touch Asha devices. In Location & Commerce, our business with auto-industry customers continued to grow, and we made good progress establishing our location-based platform with businesses like Yahoo!, Flickr, and Bing. We continued to strengthen our patent portfolio and filed more patents in the first half of 2012 than any previous six month period since 2007. And, we are encouraged that Nokia Siemens Networks returned to underlying operating profitability through strong execution of its focused strategy.

We are executing with urgency on our restructuring program. We are disposing of non-core assets like Vertu. We are taking the necessary steps to restructure the operations of the company, which included the announcement of a new program on June 14. Faster than anticipated, we have already negotiated the closure of the Ulm, Germany R&D site, and the negotiations about the planned closure of our factory in Salo, Finland are proceeding in a collaborative spirit.

We held our net cash resources at a steady level after adjusting for the annual dividend payment to our shareholders. While Q3 will remain difficult, it is a critical priority to return our Devices & Services business to positive operating cash flow as quickly as possible”


Nokia Q2 2012: 4m Lumia shipped but $1bn operating loss is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


HTC Elevate VIP outreach opens for Windows Phone owners

HTC has opened its Elevate VIP community of device owners up to Windows Phone users, inviting those with HTC Windows Phones to apply for membership to the advocacy and development program. Launched earlier this year, HTC Elevate has until now worked primarily with Android owners – members got prior access to previews of Ice Cream Sandwich updates back in February – but HTC is now accepting applications from those using the company’s other mobile platform of choice.

Ninety users will be accepted, according to HTC, still a minority in comparison to Android users in the program, which are believed to number somewhere between 500 and 1,000. HTC uses its audience to test new functionality and survey potential new features.

“We’re offering an opportunity for you to collaborate directly with the team at HTC to help with innovation, feedback, advocacy, marketing and quality” the company says of the Elevate program. “We consider our community members an important part of the creative team, so your opinions and feedback will help shape the future of HTC products and services.”

The new Windows Phone admissions are likely to be timed with HTC’s Windows Phone 8 development, though the company was conspicuous by its absence from the initial line-up of OEMs expected to release devices running the new OS. Membership is by application, and not everybody who applies will be accepted into the program.


HTC Elevate VIP outreach opens for Windows Phone owners is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Windows Phone grabs a whopping 4 percent smartphone share in USA

According to the analytical firm Strategy Analytics, there will be more than 123 million smartphones sold across the USA this year, 4 percent of these running Microsoft’s mobile operating system. Windows Phone 7 (soon to be 8) is being shown as gaining just one percent market share over their 2011 market share in 2011, running now here in 2012 on 5 million smartphones in the USA. Last year the same firm showed Windows Phone to be running on 3.5 million phones in the USA, this a relatively big bump for the still fledgeling smartphone OS.

With Microsoft’s strategy shifting to Windows Phone 8 tying in with Windows 8 and Windows RT later this year for tablets, we expect these numbers to continue to grow. Windows Phone may be tiny compared to Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS for the iPhone and iPad, but manufacturers do still appear dedicated to Microsoft’s vision. As Strategy Analytics senior analyst Scott Bicheno said today in a statement:

“Nokia, HTC and Samsung have some of the biggest Microsoft smartphone portfolios at present and they will be three main hardware vendors driving growth this year.” – Bicheno

The overall number of smartphone sold in the USA is up this year 21 percent according to this same study, last year’s numbers equalling out to be just over 101 million in all. Stay tuned as Windows Phone gains speed here in 2012 and, according to IDC, through 2015 as well – big things coming up!


Windows Phone grabs a whopping 4 percent smartphone share in USA is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Microsoft gives a tease of Office for Windows Phone 8, talks up Office 2013 integration

Microsoft gives a tease of Office of Windows Phone 8, talks up Office 2013 integration

Microsoft may have told us a lot about Windows Phone 8 in June, but it left out much of what the Office component’s update would entail. Thankfully, Partner Group program lead John Jendrezak has voluntered to let us peek under the hood, including our first real glimpse of the new Office Hub. The app’s connection to Office 2013 is more than the skin deep looks you see here: Office documents will sync more seamlessly from desktop to phone, and it’s implied that the reading position sync from the desktop version will extend to the mobile realm as well. Many mysteries still remain as to what’s exactly different in the more pocketable version of Office. There’s more about the new work suite’s communion with the cloud at the source link, however, so dig in if an offline Office feels like a prison.

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Microsoft gives a tease of Office for Windows Phone 8, talks up Office 2013 integration originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Jul 2012 16:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Phone 8 rumored to receive native screenshot capture ability

Windows Phone 8While the ability to take screenshots with your phone might not be an issue for some, it can be incredibly convenient for times when you’re trying to capture an error message, screenshot a funny conversation or a receipt for a purchase you made online. Unfortunately Windows Phone has not included that ability ever since it was introduced but assuming WPDang has their facts right, that could soon change with Windows Phone 8. The website is reporting that a native screenshot capture ability will be introduced in the upcoming Windows Phone 8 with a key combination of Start plus the Camera button. Of course we are unable to verify this at the moment, but Windows Phone users, what do you think? Is a native screenshot capture ability a feature you felt was sorely missing from the platform, or does it not make a difference to you at all?

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Windows Phone 8 devices to be available later this year?, Windows Phone 8 apps will be available in 180 countries during launch,

Windows Phone 8 may see improved lock screen notifications

Microsoft showed off a ton of new features for Windows Phone 8 at the Windows Phone Summit back in June, but the company did mention that some functionality had yet to be revealed. WPCentral has noticed that Microsoft may be planning to enhance lock screen notifications in Windows Phone 8. Currently users will see notifications for any missed calls or text messages, but WPCentral believes Microsoft will open up the lock screen to third-party apps.

WPCentral says there are four options that developers will be able to take advantage of, with one “being extremely creative” and changing the lock screen throughout the course of a day. They stopped short of revealing all the details, however. It’s also not entirely clear if Microsoft will extend support to a full blow notification center like iOS or Android.

New functionality in Windows Phone 8 will include an improved interface, with users able to change the size of tiles and arrange them as they see fit on the home screen. The OS will also gain support for 720p screens as well as dual-core processors from Qualcomm, and Windows Phone 8 share a common core with Windows 8. Microsoft also focused on its NFC and Wallet features, plus new enterprise and business security details.

[via The Verge]


Windows Phone 8 may see improved lock screen notifications is written by Ben Kersey & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Autodesk Scaleform lets you use Flash to build high-end portable device games for $299 (video)

DNP Autodesk Scaleform for Mobile Platforms lets you use Flash to build highend smartphone or tablet games for $299

Got some great smartphone game ideas and Flash talent, but no budget and little to no programming savvy? Autodesk’s Scaleform for Mobile Platforms could let you launch those ideas from a catapult, cannon or any game weapon of your choice — all you’ll need is Adobe creation tools and $299. That’s the price per platform (iOS, Android or Windows 8,) giving you tools to convert your Flash assets and animations into a full blown Unity game, as well as the engine necessary for the mobile OS. That would let your creation take full advantage of the latest smartphone graphics and multi-processing capabilities, giving users smoother play and sharper looking games — according to the company. The software is heavily based on the console and PC versions of Scaleform, optimized for the small devices and costing thousands less. So, if you think you’ve got the mad Flash skillz to create the next Infinity Blade, check the PR and video after the break to see how to power up.

Continue reading Autodesk Scaleform lets you use Flash to build high-end portable device games for $299 (video)

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Autodesk Scaleform lets you use Flash to build high-end portable device games for $299 (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Jul 2012 08:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia: it ‘won’t be long’ before Verizon gets its due, and we’ll have more gear in the fall

Richard Kerris of Nokia in interview

Most talk of a Nokia Lumia for Verizon has been relegated to small-scale rumors and incidental CDMA references. Nokia’s Worldwide Developer Relations head Richard Kerris has rather suddenly brought the elusive subject into focus through an interview: he tells Neowin that it “won’t be long” before the can-you-hear-me-now network gets a taste of an experience that has previously been limited to the GSM side of the US telecom world, like AT&T and T-Mobile. We’re not getting a roadmap for any Verizon devices just yet, to no one’s surprise, but Kerris is more than willing to share when we can expect the next wave of Nokia devices. We should expect a refresh of the line sometime in the fall, and whatever’s arriving in the spring will purportedly be good enough to have people “climbing over themselves” to get it — just in case Nokia’s role as a Windows Phone 8 partner for the fall launch and beyond wasn’t clear enough. The question-and-answer session touches on a handful of other subjects, including a hint that the near-mythical Windows Phone with PureView may be a bit closer to reality, so click on through if you’d like a peek at where the Lumia is headed next.

Nokia: it ‘won’t be long’ before Verizon gets its due, and we’ll have more gear in the fall originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Jul 2012 10:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon Nokia Windows Phones plus PureView Lumias “very soon”

Nokia may not be in quite as much trouble as RIM, but the company is still facing difficulties in the current smartphone climate. Richard Kerris, VP of Worldwide Developer Relations, had a sit down with Neowin for an interview that detailed some of Nokia’s plans going forward. There may be some out there who want to use a Nokia Windows Phone in the United States but don’t want to join AT&T or T-Mobile to do so, and Kerris confirmed that Nokia devices would be coming to other carriers including Verizon, saying that “it won’t be long.”

That’s the only teaser that Kerris gave, with no other indication of when exactly we can expect to see Nokia’s Windows Phones on other networks. Kerris also reaffirmed that Nokia was working on bringing the PureView technology found on the 808 to future Windows Phone handsets, saying that those products would be coming “very soon.”

Other details in the interview included Windows Phone 8. Kerris believes that carriers will offer attractive upgrade options to make people jump to the next version of the OS. AT&T and Nokia introduced the Lumia 900 in the United States with a $100 price point, so prices along those lines may not be out of the question for future devices.

Nokia also filed for more patents last year than any other year in the company’s history. Currently Nokia holds around 30,000 patents, with 10,000 of those active. On top of that, the company has been focusing on research and development, resulting in concepts like the Kinetic Labs flexible smartphone that Nokia is trying to turn into a feasible product. Kerris ends the interview saying that Nokia will innovate its way out of the current predicament, with new products coming this Fall.


Verizon Nokia Windows Phones plus PureView Lumias “very soon” is written by Ben Kersey & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Mobile Miscellany: week of July 2nd, 2012

Mobile Miscellany week of July 2nd, 2012

Not all mobile news is destined for the front page, but if you’re like us and really want to know what’s going on, then you’ve come to the right place. This past week, the HTC One V marked its debut at US Cellular and Verizon announced a dumb phone with a surprisingly handy feature. These stories and more await after the break. So buy the ticket and take the ride as we explore the “best of the rest” for this week of July 2nd, 2012.

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Mobile Miscellany: week of July 2nd, 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 07 Jul 2012 21:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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