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Nokia and Microsoft Announce Mobile Partnership

Posted by Shirley Brady on February 11, 2011 08:00 AM

Big news this morning, as Nokia CEO Stephen Elop and Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer announce a major partnership between their respective brands — Nokia is adopting Windows Phone as its primary operating system, while Nokia will bring its hardware expertise to developing Windows Phone handsets.

Nokia CEO Stephen Elop commented on Twitter, "Today Nokia Dives Forward" about their plans to collaborate on a new mobile ecosystem. More details in the companies' statement after the jump.

Here's the announcement that was posted on the Nokia corporate blog, and discussed in a press conference today in London:

Today in London, our two companies announced plans for a broad strategic partnership that combines the respective strengths of our companies and builds a new global mobile ecosystem. The partnership increases our scale, which will result in significant benefits for consumers, developers, mobile operators and businesses around the world. We both are incredibly excited about the journey we are on together.

While the specific details of the deal are being worked out, here’s a quick summary of what we are working towards:

• Nokia will adopt Windows Phone as its primary smartphone strategy, innovating on top of the platform in areas such as imaging, where Nokia is a market leader.

• Nokia will help drive and define the future of Windows Phone. Nokia will contribute its expertise on hardware design, language support, and help bring Windows Phone to a larger range of price points, market segments and geographies.

• Nokia and Microsoft will closely collaborate on development, joint marketing initiatives and a shared development roadmap to align on the future evolution of mobile products.

• Bing will power Nokia’s search services across Nokia devices and services, giving customers access to Bing’s next generation search capabilities. Microsoft adCenter will provide search advertising services on Nokia’s line of devices and services.

• Nokia Maps will be a core part of Microsoft’s mapping services. For example, Maps would be integrated with Microsoft’s Bing search engine and adCenter advertising platform to form a unique local search and advertising experience.

• Nokia’s extensive operator billing agreements will make it easier for consumers to purchase Nokia Windows Phone services in countries where credit-card use is low.

• Microsoft development tools will be used to create applications to run on Nokia Windows Phones, allowing developers to easily leverage the ecosystem’s global reach.

• Microsoft will continue to invest in the development of Windows Phone and cloud services so customers can do more with their phone, across their work and personal lives.

• Nokia’s content and application store will be integrated with Microsoft Marketplace for a more compelling consumer experience.

We each bring incredible assets to the table. Nokia’s history of innovation in the hardware space, global hardware scale, strong history of intellectual property creation and navigation assets are second to none. Microsoft is a leader in software and services; the company’s incredible expertise in platform creation forms the opportunity for its billions of customers and millions of partners to get more out of their devices.

Together, we have some of the world’s most admired brands, including Windows, Office, Bing, Xbox Live, NAVTEQ and Nokia. We also have a shared understanding of what it takes to build and sustain a mobile ecosystem, which includes the entire experience from the device to the software to the applications, services and the marketplace.

Today, the battle is moving from one of mobile devices to one of mobile ecosystems, and our strengths here are complementary. Ecosystems thrive when they reach scale, when they are fueled by energy and innovation and when they provide benefits and value to each person or company who participates. This is what we are creating; this is our vision; this is the work we are driving from this day forward.

There are other mobile ecosystems. We will disrupt them.

There will be challenges. We will overcome them.

Success requires speed. We will be swift.

Together, we see the opportunity, and we have the will, the resources and the drive to succeed.

Here's a clip from today's press conference in London:

Comments

Xandro Australia says:

Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhh Microsoft are at it again - can't do things for themselves. Microsoft have never been able to. They are brain dead and cannot compete with APPLE for creativity and innovation so what do they do?
Go into partnership! with someone else.
Then... ...wammmmmmmoh. They will buy them out.
How typical of Microsoft to do this. There is nothing Microsoft can do with their own old and tired people so they go gobbling others companies.
By the time they finish their eating - APPLE would have invented, created, launched something new, marketed fresh ideas, and introduced something we didn't know we needed, and given consumers comfort, peace-of-mind, and assurance someone out there actually likes them.
Time for Microsoft to pack their bags and throw in the towel. APPLE have won.
Xandro
Sydney, Australia

February 11, 2011 08:28 AM #

Kuwait Classifieds Kuwait says:

I think Nokia is heading the right way this time. After they found them self way behind Apple they are trying to catch back.

February 11, 2011 06:16 PM #

Comments are closed

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