10 feb. 2014

Better late than never

Photo: androidtopnews.com.
So, Nokia Corp plans to release this month a smartphone that runs a version of Google Inc.'s Android mobile software - according to WSJ there will be forces in that are familiar with the matter: as it concludes the sale of its handset business to Microsoft Corp. While Nokia engineers had been developing the Android phone when Microsoft was conducting due diligence on its €5.4 billion ($7.4 billion) deal to buy the Nokia handset business and license the company's patents.
The Linux-based Android phone was aimed at emerging market customers, and has been tailored in a way that won't promote some of the key Google-developed features that a more traditional Android-powered phone might, these people said.

Three years ago, The Wall Street Journa says quite correctly, Nokia agreed to abandon the homegrown software used on most of its smartphones in favor of Microsoft Windows Phone software after Microsoft offered billions of dollars for marketing and development. Last year, the Finnish company agreed to sell its handset business to Microsoft, cementing that partnership.
We kan see that Android's share of the global smartphone market continues to climb, Nokia's new phone could signal that Microsoft is willing to be pragmatic, including relying on a bitter rival's software to help boost sales volumes.
Nobody is talking about nothing but the WSJ is an authoritative and usually wery reliable source of information.

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