2,000 Wintek workers go on strike over bonus payments, may affect Nokia and iPhone production

As the Year of the Tiger approaches (February 14th this year), Chinese workers look forward to their week-long holiday — a nightmarish time for foreign vendors who’ll struggle to get hold of anyone in the country. Sadly, this wasn’t the case for Wintek — screen supplier for Nokia, Huawei and Apple. The Taiwanese company’s East China factory ground to a halt last Friday morning, while about 2,000 of its 10,000 workers went on a five-hour protest over a rumored bonus cancellation for the second year in a row. On top of that, workers also criticized Wintek for using n-hexane — a banned substance used for cleaning LCDs — which they claim caused the death and paralyzation of several workers last year. Factory officials and Chinese health authorities don’t deny that n-hexane was used, but they say it wasn’t responsible for either the deaths or the paralyzations. Now, the good news: Wintek has promised that workers will get their bonuses, and further said that the factory hasn’t used n-hexane since August — complete with proof that current n-hexane levels are lower than safety regulations require. Let’s hope things get better between management and workers from now on. One more picture and video of the protest after the break.

Continue reading 2,000 Wintek workers go on strike over bonus payments, may affect Nokia and iPhone production

2,000 Wintek workers go on strike over bonus payments, may affect Nokia and iPhone production originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 19:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Apple Insider, 9to5Mac  |  sourceMingpao (1), (2), BackChina  | Email this | Comments

Nokia N900 review

Today, Nokia stands at a fascinating fork in the road. Let’s consider the facts: first, and most unavoidably, the company is the largest manufacturer of cellphones in the world by a truly sobering margin. At every end of the spectrum, in every market segment, Nokia is successfully pushing phones — from the highest of the high-end (see Vertu) to the lowest of the low (the ubiquitous 1100 series, which as far as we can tell, remains the best selling phone in history). The kind of stark dominance Nokia has built over its competition certainly isn’t toppled overnight, but what might be the company’s biggest asset has turned out to be its biggest problem, too: S60. In the past eight years, Nokia’s bread-and-butter smartphone platform has gone from a pioneer, to a staple, to an industry senior citizen while upstarts like Google and Apple (along with a born-again Palm) have come from practically zero to hijack much of the vast mindshare Espoo once enjoyed.

Of course, mindshare doesn’t pay the bills, but in a business dominated by fickle consumerism perhaps more than any other, mindshare foreshadows market share — it’s a leading indicator. Put simply, there are too many bright minds with brilliant ideas trying to get a piece of the wireless pie for even a goliath like Nokia to rest on its laurels for years on end. Yet, until just very recently, it seemed content to do just that, slipping out incremental tweaks to S60 on refined hardware while half-heartedly throwing a bone to the “the future is touch!” crowd by introducing S60 5th Edition alongside forgettable devices like the 5800 XpressMusic and N97. A victim of its own success, the company that had helped define the modern smartphone seemed either unwilling or unable to redefine it.

Not all is lost, though. As S60 has continued to pay the bills and produce modern, lustworthy devices like the E71 and E72, the open, Linux-based Maemo project has quietly been incubating in the company’s labs for over four years. What began as a geeky science experiment (a “hobby” in Steve Jobs parlance) on the Nokia 770 tablet back in 2005 matured through several iterations — even producing the first broadly-available WiMAX MID — until it finally made the inevitable leap into smartphone territory late last year with the announcement of the N900. On the surface, a migration to Maemo seems to make sense for Nokia’s long-term smartphone strategy; after all, it’s years younger than S60 and its ancestry, it’s visually attractive in all the ways S60 is not, and it was built with an open philosophy from the ground up, fostering a geeky, close-knit community of hackers and devs from day one. Thing is, Nokia’s been absolutely emphatic with us — Maemo’s intended for handheld computers (read: MIDs) with voice capability, while S60 continues to be the choice for purebred smartphones.

So, back to that fork in the road we’d mentioned. In one direction lies that current strategy Nokia is trumpeting — continue to refine S60 through future Symbian revisions (with the help of the Symbian Foundation) and keep pumping out pure-profit smartphones in the low to midrange while sprinkling the upper end of the market with a Maemo device here and there. In the long term, though, running two platforms threatens to dilute Nokia’s resources, cloud its focus, and confuse consumers, which leads us to the other direction in the fork: break clean from Symbian, develop Maemo into a refined, powerhouse smartphone platform, and push it throughout the range.

Our goal here is to test the N900, of course, but fundamentally, that’s the question we tried to keep in the backs of our minds for this review: could Maemo ultimately become the platform of Nokia’s future? Let’s dig in.

Continue reading Nokia N900 review

Nokia N900 review originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia patent application points to flexible phone displays

It may still be quite a ways from realizing its ambitious Morph concept, but it looks like Nokia has been toying around with the idea of flexible displays as of late, as evidenced by a just-published patent application (first filed back in 2008). Covering a “user interface, device and method for a physically flexible device,” the application details (among other things) how a flexible display might be used on a phone to do things other than make it more portable. Most interestingly, that includes bending the phone into a particular shape to perform a specific task — Nokia suggests rolling it into a can to search for a bar or pub, or bending it into a bowl to search for a restaurant. Not exactly the most imaginative examples, to be sure, although we’re sure Nokia will have plenty of time to come up with some more interesting uses before any such phones actually hit the market.

[Thanks, Anand]

Nokia patent application points to flexible phone displays originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 00:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Go Rumors  |  sourceUSPTO  | Email this | Comments

Nokia Ovi press event this Thursday, ‘big news’ promised

Nokia Ovi press event this Thursday, 'big news' teased

If you’re a Nokia lover who is currently jealous of all the Apple fans and their current state of delicious expectation, we’re happy to say that now you too can savor a little anticipation. Nokia is sending out invitations to an event this Thursday, January 21, indicating it will “share some big news with you.” Well, not with you exactly, but rather with us media-types, and you can be sure we will then pass it along posthaste. But what will Nokia be sharing? We hate to spoil the fun, but we can’t imagine it’ll be anything other than the revamped Ovi Store the company has been talking up lately — that said, we’re always up for a surprise.

Nokia Ovi press event this Thursday, ‘big news’ promised originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jan 2010 07:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia N97’s Brain Maze requires steady hand, typical mind-control equipment

Not everyone has one of NeuroSky’s MindSet brainwave interface headsets lying around, but in the off chance you do — and you’ve got an N97 handy — this could finally be your ticket to a sharper wit, improved hand-eye coordination, better-smelling breath, and frankly, a whole new you. Forum Nokia regular Paul Coulton has recently thrown together the appropriately-titled Brain Maze for Nokia’s flagship S60 5th Edition set, reinterpreting the staple Labyrinth game for accelerometer-equipped handsets by adding in checkpoints controlled by the MindSet’s input — in other words, you’ve got to (gulp) think to advance through the course. It looks like it could be a blast, we admit — but considering how talented we are at completely disabling and unplugging our brains when we sit down in front of a video game, we could be spending months making it past level one. Follow the break for a little video of Brain Maze in thought-controlled action.

Continue reading Nokia N97’s Brain Maze requires steady hand, typical mind-control equipment

Nokia N97’s Brain Maze requires steady hand, typical mind-control equipment originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jan 2010 07:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Nokia Review  |  sourcePaul Coulton’s Forum Nokia Blog  | Email this | Comments

Apple retaliates: requests US import ban on Nokia phones


As expected, Apple just responded to Nokia’s ITC request to ban Apple device imports with a US embargo request of its very own. Notice of Apple’s complaint (without any detail) was posted yesterday on the website of the International Trade Commission — a government agency tasked with protecting the US market from unfair trade practices. As you might recall, the whole Nokia v. Apple legal spat started with Nokia suing Apple for infringing upon Nokia patents relating to GSM, UMTS, and WiFi; a claim later expanded to include “implementation patents” covering a wide range of items including camera sensors and touchscreens. While the ITC hasn’t agreed to investigate either Nokia’s or Apple’s complaints, it is customary to do so with investigations usually taking about 15 months to complete. We’ll post more when the details of Apple’s patent infringement complaint are revealed.

Apple retaliates: requests US import ban on Nokia phones originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 16 Jan 2010 07:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Symbian provides early glimpse at 2011 Nokia smartphone experience

We’ve been pretty hard on Nokia with regard to its miserable S60 5th (aka, Symbian^1) user experience as compared to the competition. Fortunately, Nokia’s bound and determined to freshen things up in 2010 with two major updates scheduled for the first and second halves of the year. At the moment, Symbian^3 (that’s Symbian three) is expected first with Symbian^4 coming before the end of the year (functionally complete in Q3 with S^4 devices shipping in early 2011 according to the symbian.org wiki page). What we’ve got above then, is a UI Concept proposal for the latter. As you can tell from the pics, Symbian^4 promises to deliver an entirely new user interface: navigation is streamlined and platform apps will be reorganized and redesigned to leverage next gen graphics meant to deliver visually appealing transparencies and transitions on Symbian devices. The experience is based on Direct UI and built upon Qt and Orbit — a strategy that Nokia hopes will lure developers to the table by making apps easy to build and update with broad scalability across Nokia’s entire lineup of handsets. Note that the concept is open for discussion (and thus change) so voice your opinion now. And no, responding “N900 FTW” doesn’t count. One more image after the break.

Continue reading Symbian provides early glimpse at 2011 Nokia smartphone experience

Symbian provides early glimpse at 2011 Nokia smartphone experience originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 05:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink SlashGear  |  sourceSymbian Developer, Symbian Developer (PDF)  | Email this | Comments

Nokia N900 gets its second firmware update this week

Don’t get us wrong, enabling the Ovi Store was a pretty sweet add-on in the last update — but the second N900 push in just a single week features a list of fixes and changes that should put smiles on a few owners’ faces, too (and a few devs’ faces, for that matter, while they wait for this payment bug to get patched up). This time around we’ve got full support for Swiss keyboard layouts, better compatibility with 3-branded SIM cards, support for Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 in the handset’s Mail for Exchange service, and a handful of performance and usability tweaks for Ovi Maps. It’ll be available both over-the-air and via PC download in a phased global rollout over the next day, so keep checking; no need to get all crazy about it if you’ve already installed the first update, though — you’ll be automatically alerted when this one’s ready for you.

Nokia N900 gets its second firmware update this week originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jan 2010 01:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia’s Maemo Ovi Store looking rickety, ‘beta’ label well-deserved

Bugs are to be expected in brand-new apps and platforms — particularly when they’re clearly marked with a “beta” sign — but it starts to get a little hairier when there’s money involved. One of the early crowd favorites in Nokia’s Ovi Store for Maemo appears to be the game Angry Birds, which is available with a €3 level pack — problem is, plenty of folks have discovered a way around actually paying the cash, which becomes a big problem for the developer very, very quickly. The level pack has since been removed, probably the best move until Nokia can figure out what’s going on here and issue a patch. In the meantime, looks like it’s back to the ol’ repositories.

Nokia’s Maemo Ovi Store looking rickety, ‘beta’ label well-deserved originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Jan 2010 20:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Nokia Blog  |  sourceMaemo Talk  | Email this | Comments

Nokia ‘Saga’ accidentally outed in AccuWeather ad?

We’re not quite sure what to make of this, but it appears that the AccuWeather app for S60 5th Edition devices has gone ahead and leaked an unknown Nokia device — the “Saga” — which appears to be a sort of N97 Mini Mini (two “Minis” on purpose there) that trades the tilting screen for a more traditional flat sliding one. As Symbian-Guru points out, Nokia itself doesn’t typically assign names to its handsets — it leaves that job to its carrier partners — so this might simply be a branded version of one of the existing N97 variants, but naturally, the leaked device theory is juicier. At any rate, if this were to come Stateside, they might have a bit of trouble slipping it by Samsung since they’ve already got a Saga in the mix here, so we’ll be keeping an eye out for some blander N, E, or X series label if this gets real.

Update: David Fields of the Nokia Messaging team is saying over on Symbian-Guru that it’s simply an N97 Mini — but that still doesn’t explain where the Saga name comes into play. The mystery continues!

Nokia ‘Saga’ accidentally outed in AccuWeather ad? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Jan 2010 16:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSymbian-Guru  | Email this | Comments