Nokia
is Returning to the Smartphone Business in 2016
Nokia CEO Rajeev Suri has
announced that the former world’s largest smartphone maker will return to the
smartphone business next year. It won’t be making its own phones, but instead
look for suitable partners like it did for the N1 tablet.
When Microsoft bought Nokia
in 2014, one of the clauses was that the company won’t make any phones till the
end of 2015. With 2016 approaching fast, the company is now quickly looking for
partners to mark its return.
The handsets won’t be from
Nokia in the traditional sense. While it can assist in designing those phones
and allow others to license its name, it won’t be able to use its traditional
Lumia, Asha or X series names as those are owned by Microsoft now as part of
the $7.2 billion deal, nor would it manufacture those products itself.
Nokia
won’t manufacture the phones and also won’t be able to use the Lumia, Asha and
X branding
“We will look for suitable
partners,” said the CEO in an interview with Reuters. “Microsoft makes mobile
phones. We would simply design them and then make the brand name available to
license.” Recently, it used the Taiwanese contract manufacturer Foxconn to
build the N1 device. Foxconn is popular for its partnership with Apple.
Now that the Microsoft deal
is done, this new Nokia is free to use any OS, including Android for its new
phones. Just what kind of devices will we see and will they be as readily
available as the Lumia and Asha phones remains to be seen. Remember that the N1
Android-running tablet was released on a very limited scale.
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