Yesterday In the News:
The Smartphone maker Nokia, soon to be acquired by Microsoft, is turning to software created by arch-rival Google for a new line of phones it hopes will make it a late contender in the dynamic low-cost Smartphone market.
The Smartphone maker Nokia, soon to be acquired by Microsoft, is turning to software created by arch-rival Google for a new line of phones it hopes will make it a late contender in the dynamic low-cost Smartphone market.
Its first model, the Nokia X, will rely upon
an open version of the Android mobile software system created by Google that
has become the world’s most popular software used in Smartphones.
The Nokia X,
seen here at its unveiling at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, runs Google’s
Android operating system.
The release
of the phone, just days before Nokia sells its handset business to Microsoft in
a $7.2 billion deal, is an attempt to stay relevant in emerging markets, where
low-cost Android phones are being snapped up by hundreds of millions of buyers.
But the strategy shift underlines the many
missteps made by the Finnish company since Apple launched its ground-breaking
iPhone in 2007.
Nokia was caught between a rock and a hard
place - committed to using Microsoft’s Windows Phone software but needing
Android software to reach more cost-sensitive customers, CCS Insight’s head of
research Ben Wood said.
"That a soon-to-be Microsoft-owned company,
which is the owner of the original operating system, is moving to Android is
almost an admission of failure," he said.
Global
smartphone shipments grew 41 percent annually to reach nearly 1 billion units
in 2013, according to market research firm Strategy Analytics. Android phones
from dozens of handset makers accounted for almost four out of every five
smartphones sold, or 781.2 million units.
In the past
year, Apple phones grew 13 percent and shipped 153.4 million smartphones
worldwide for a 15 percent share of the market, making it the second largest
smartphone platform after Android.
Microsoft was a distant third in market share
terms, shipping 35.7 million units worldwide with its Windows Mobile software
platform, but still struggling to gain traction in the low-tier and
premium-tier smartphone categories, Strategy Analytics said. Android and Apple
hold sway, respectively, in the low-tier and premium-tier segments.
Nokia CEO
Stephen Elop holds up Nokia’s new smartphones, which run Google’s Android operating
system. Nokia is soon to be acquired by Microsoft, which makes the struggling
Windows Phone operating system.
Nokia’s main
strategy remains to rely on Microsoft Windows Phone software for its premium
models while adapting Android to participate in the low end of the smartphone
market.
WINDOWS SHUT OUT
In February
2011, Nokia’s Chief Executive Stephen Elop famously compared Nokia’s failing
smartphone strategy - based on multiple software platforms of its own making -
to a man on a burning platform.
He chose to
jump into the arms of Microsoft, producing high-end Lumia-branded smartphones
that have been well received by critics, but less popular with customers and
app developers, the people who make the software that turns phones into
multi-purpose tools.
The
Microsoft technology also does not work on the chip sets found in cheaper
smartphones, the fast-growing market crowding out Nokia’s Asha feature phones,
which lack the full Internet capabilities of smartphones.
The company
rejected Android three years ago, when it tied its fortunes to Microsoft’s
Windows Phone. But Monday’s announcement shows it has quietly been working on
an open Android device for months.
Product
Marketing Vice President Jussi Nevanlinna said the number one requirement from
customers was access to Android apps.
"Our
fans often times tell us ‘We love your hardware, we love your products, but we
also love our Android apps’," he said. "Can you make something happen
so the Android apps magically run here?’"
"Asha
has failed to deliver the volumes they needed to be competitive in the low-cost
smartphone space, while Android remains completely rampant," CCS Insight’s
Wood said.
The Nokia X
uses the open source version of Android, which runs most apps without the right
to customize Google’s basic software.
For Nokia,
it was a question of making this humiliating reversal in its strategy or facing
irrelevance in this category of phones, Wood said.
Rather than
a complete about-face, however, Nokia’s adoption of Android for the Nokia X
appears to be a tactical reversal, albeit one that amounts to throwing the cat
among the pigeons.
NOKIA SERVICES
The open
version of Android software means that the new Nokia phone does not have rely
on Google’s services and access to the Google Play app store. Instead, Nokia is
bundling it with its own music and map offers, and Microsoft’s email, cloud,
messaging and search services.
Apps will be
available in Nokia’s own apps store, as well as a host of other app stores,
Nevanlinna said.
The look of
the device is starkly different from the usual Android phone, with nods to the
interface to Lumia and Asha devices.
Nevanlinna
said rather than confusing customers, Nokia X, where X indicates a cross
between Nokia hardware, Android apps and Microsoft services, will be a stepping
stone to Lumia, and will share the same cloud services.
"Lumia
remains our primary Smartphone strategy, " he said. "We innovate in
the high end, and then we take that innovation and bring it to lower price
points, and therefore move the Lumia family down" (to reach more
customers).
Wood said
Nokia and Microsoft had an advantage over other users of open Android, such as
some Chinese manufacturers, in that they had a ready-made set of services that
they could slot into the phone.
"It
means Nokia is able to participate in that entry-level space, but our view is
they will try to push Windows Phone down into that space as quickly as
possible," he said.
Nonetheless,
devices running an open Android operating system will not sit easily within
Microsoft, whose fortune is founded on the core belief that software should be
paid for.
It has long
campaigned against Android, and Google in general, for offering a free
operating system to handset makers, which it claims uses elements of its own technology.
Through a
series of patent agreements, Microsoft now receives payments from every major
Android handset maker except Motorola. Due to Android phones’ explosive growth,
Microsoft now earns more money from Android royalties than it does from licensing
Windows Phone.
The Nokia X will be available in all markets
apart from Japan and Korea, where Nokia is not present, and North America, with
shipping starting within a week, Nevanlinna said. It will be priced at 89 euros
excluding operator subsidies.
All from YahooTech
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