Nokia ditches Windows for Android

The Nokia brand name is to disappear from mobile phones, less than a year after it was acquired by Microsoft.

The Nokia brand name is to disappear from mobile phones, less than a year after it was acquired by Microsoft.

Published Feb 25, 2014

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Barcelona - Nokia is targeting emerging markets with three low-cost smartphones that use Google's Android operating system rather than the Windows Phone software from Microsoft, which is about to buy Nokia's handset business.

Nokia will ditch many of the Google services that come with Android and use instead the Microsoft services such as Bing search, Skype communications and OneDrive file storage. Its home screen sports larger, resizable tiles resembling those on Windows phone.

“More and more people are buying smartphones for less that 100 euros,” Stephen Elop, Nokia executive vice president, said on Monday as he presented the new phones at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain. “That sub-100 range is a massive opportunity for us. According to analysts, it will grow four times as fast as rest of smartphone market.”

Once the No. 1 maker of cellphones, Nokia has been struggling to keep up with the iPhone and devices running Android. And even as competition intensifies for high-end smartphones, Nokia has been hit by competition from cheaper made by Chinese and other Asian companies.

The Nokia X is on sale immediately for 89 euros (about R1 200). The Nokia X+ will cost 99 euros and the Nokia XL will cost 109 euros, with both going on sale in early March.

The Nokia X and X+ both have 4-inch screens, but the X+ offers an SD card. The XL has a 5-inch screen and a better 5-megapixel camera. The one on the X is 3 megapixels.

Elop said all three phones will be “available broadly around the world, starting in growth markets.” The aim is to make the Nokia X a bridge to high-end Windows smartphones under the Lumia brand.

They won't be available in the US, Canada, Korea and Japan in part to avoid competing with Lumia phones, which cost hundreds of dollars in the US without subsidies from phone carriers.

Elop said that despite the use of Android, Nokia remains committed to Windows and Microsoft, which is buying Nokia's phone business and patent rights in a 5.4-billion euro deal expected to be completed next month.

Timo Toikkanen, Nokia's executive vice president for mobile phones, said Nokia went with Android in part because of the greater availability of apps, particularly those tailored for local markets. He said the aim is to lure customers who wouldn't have bought a high-end Windows phone anyway, but might have gone for a rival Android offering.

In a blog post, Microsoft said it is pleased that the new devices will include Microsoft's services, as it “provides the opportunity to bring millions of people, particularly in growth markets, into the Microsoft family.”

- Sapa-AP

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