Who Are the Top Five Mobile Phone Makers?
Feature phones may be on their way out but they're still key to the current healthy market for mobile phones in general, according to a new report.
Feature phones may be on their way out but they're still key to the current healthy market for mobile phones in general, according to a new report.
It's about time. Nokia introduces its first Windows Phone handsets and promises more to come -- next year.
Nokia introduces new Windows 7 phones at Nokia World
On the heels of a new iPhone launch, a top Microsoft exec is talking up Windows Phone 7.5, which is nearing its own commercial launch.
Mobile Burn: Partnership stays on schedule even though the deal between the two companies has not yet been finalized.
Electronista: Apple, Nokia and RIM among 32 companies sued by H-W Technology.
The Register: Cell-phone giant pleads with coders to keep building apps for smartphones running Symbian and Qt platforms, in spite of its commitment to Windows Phone 7.
PC Magazine: The Astound sports a 10 megapixel camera. T-Mobile is selling it at basically $10 a pixel.
Brighthand: Apparently, Nokia and Microsoft's Windows Phone partnership is for five years and $1 billion.
The Register: The Firefox 4 Web browser ships for Android-run mobile devices.
Nokia gives developers free WP7 phones, while Microsoft extends mobile reach to the Mac.
Engadget: Apple still ahead in terms of app of store revenue but its market share is shrinking.
Brighthand: Microsoft gives Nokia almost complete freedom by Microsoft to customize its mobile platform.
A small band of disaffected Nokia shareholders that want to rescind the pact with Microsoft appears to have given up the fight.
The companys execs outlined an upcoming major update to Windows Phone 7 aimed at making it more attractive to buyers. Meanwhile, Nokia CEO Stephen Elop said during his keynote that the Microsoft deal will pay it "billions."