Nokia

Asymco has published one of the better pieces of analytical work on the mobile handset industry seen on blogs in a long time.  Author Horace Dediu has tracked operating profits for 8 handset vendors over the last three years, and plotted them on various charts.  He shows the rise of Apple, the complete collapse of most vendors, and (surprisingly, given the bent of the industry press) the steady progress that RIM is making.

This chart tells the story in a way that words will never be able to. Profits are growing steadily at RIM, and astronomically at Apple.  Every other vendor is treading water, or dying.  Why do LG and Siemens even bother anymore?

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Nokia buy Palm? Not so fast…

by alec on November 17, 2009

Last week rumours circulated (again) that Nokia might acquire Palm.  Palm shares rallied, but seem to have settled back down this week. The “deal”, after all, is a Wall Street wet dream, and not much more. 

It’s true that Nokia’s stock price is suffering and that Nokia’s share is slipping in the smart phone market. The mobile market is in transition, and Nokia was ill prepared. Nokia is fundamentally a hardware company trying to become a software company in a market which has lurched sharply toward software as the core differentiator.  Wedded to Symbian while top competitors Apple and Google have bet on *NIX on the handset, Nokia knows it has to make some changes.  The advantages of a modern OS architecture on the handset simply can’t be overstated.

And, in fact, Nokia is making changes.  The N900 is a mobile Linux device, running Nokia’s home grown Maemo OS.  The N900 has debuted to mixed reviews but Nokia isn’t asleep at the wheel.

And that’s why the billions required to buy Palm aren’t going to get spent.

Who might make a good dance partner for Palm? How about:

  • Yahoo – Apple and Google have both demonstrated the value of an integrated user experience connecting web based media and storefront properties to the handset.  By all accounts, Palm’s WebOS is the best platform for creating mobile web experiences today.  What better marriage than Yahoo’s deep web experience and Palm’s sexy new mobile platform?
  • RIM – BlackBerry OS is long in the tooth, and everyone knows it. The current king of the smartphone hill has a lot to lose, and the current crop of new competitors have better platforms to build their future businesses upon.  Meld RIM’s deep understanding of the enterprise to Palm’s mobile web platform, and market it through RIM’s well entrenched carrier relationships and you’d have a winner.
  • In fact, RIM acquiring Palm might be so threatening to Microsoft that they’d conceivably enter the race just to make sure that RIM didn’t win the big prize.  The shift to web technologies on the handset and within the enterprise would threaten Microsoft’s core franchise.  However, given how poorly Microsoft has executed on mobile, a successful bid from Redmond would likely be the kiss of death for Palm. 

My bet’s on RIM, even though a Yahoo / Palm marriage has the potential to create one of the most exciting and dynamic companies in the mobile world today.  Palm needs a dance partner, but it’s not clear that Yahoo’s leadership has the stones to get the job done. The good news for Palm’s Rubenstein is that there are plenty of potential suitors in the market, if indeed the company is for sale.

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The Progress Project: Nokia and Lonely Planet document mobile innoviation around the globe

September 3, 2009

The Progress Project is a joint venture between Nokia and Lonely Planet designed to highlight the amazing and diverse ways that mobile technology can impact ordinary people’s lives. It’s a grand vision of mobility, ranging from the ways that mobile devices can be used in urban settings to predict traffic flows or environmental impact, to [...]

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Smackdown: Nokia N97 vs iPhone 3GS

July 3, 2009

Nokia’s N97 is the latest in their range of high end smart phones. The first N-Series phone with a touch screen, the N97 also hides a flip-out keyboard. Laden with 32G of storage, a 5 megapixel camera, Nokia Maps, Nokia’s Comes with Music service, and more, this phone is a feature laden treat for mobile [...]

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RIM and Nokia need a Manhattan… project, that is.

July 1, 2009

The Boy Genius has published an angst filled missive directed at RIM on the future of BlackBerry OS.  Here are a few choice quotes: “RIM’s OS is more than antiquated, it’s borderline laughable.” “There’s so many limitations to RIM’s OS, and even RIM’s data network that it offsets all the wonderful things they’ve managed to [...]

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Truphone adds 11 Nokia handsets

June 25, 2009

The team at Truphone has been focused for quite a while on their iPhone products.  Yesterday, however, they made an announcement that hearkens back to their roots.  11 new Nokia devices have been added to their list of compatible devices, including the N96, N78, N85, N79, 5630, 5800, 5320, 6210, 6220, 6650 and E63.  All [...]

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The meaning of Nokia’s poor results

April 17, 2009

As a mobile phone user I’m sure I’m a bit of an oddball.  I regularly carry two devices – an iPhone and a Nokia N95 – and have a small collection of handsets that I’ve used at one point or another over the years.  I carry the iPhone because it’s hands down the best mobile [...]

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Mobile Darwinism at work.

January 26, 2009

Is there a trend underway?  Mobile startups everywhere are looking beyond cheap voice calls as generous minute packages have niched these players into providing cheap international long distance and not much more.  Om Malik profiles several this morning, including the newly “rebooted” iSkoot. The conditions are right for these companies.  As first Apple, then Google, [...]

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Nokia IDEAS a little thin on … ideas

December 9, 2008

Nokia’s latest experiment with social media is online.  Called IDEAS it’s billed as “an interactive conversation about connected commerce and culture.  It’s a new way to interact with thought leaders and their ideas.“  The idea (pardon me) is for visitors to play the short video clips or read the material supplied on topics ranging from [...]

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Why WebKit make sense for MSFT

November 7, 2008

Speculation that Microsoft might replace the IE rendering with WebKit is running high this morning after remarks made by Steve Ballmer in Australia.  Although hardly a ringing endorsement of WebKit, here’s why Steve (and Steve Sinofsky, Mr. Windows) should consider this: The battle to own the presentation layer of the Web was lost long ago.  [...]

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