zcallingcard.com

  •     
  • About
  • 26
    Jan 12

    Nokia’s Lumia sales show promise in Q4, but Symbian continues to slide

      Posted by Admin
      0 comments

    Nokia may have shipped over 1 million Lumia handsets in the fourth quarter, and could boost this number to 3.2 million in the first quarter, according to a survey of analysts.

    A Bloomberg survey of 22 forecasters had only one analyst predicting Lumia sales of below 1 million, with 1.3 million being a popular estimate for shipment made by the end of 2011. Expectations among the 22 analysts surveyed ranged from sales of 800,000 Lumia phones to 2 million, though the average expectations were above 1 million. Nokia will report its fourth-quarter earnings Thursday.

    “The numbers look promising,” Espen Furnes, an Oslo-based fund manager at Storebrand Asset Management, told Bloomberg. “If Nokia is able to have a strong launch and surpass at least one million and keep that type of momentum, this would help put them in a credible position that is crucial to winning back investors.”

    However, Nokia’s overall smartphones sales, which still rely heavily on Symbian, may have plummeted 36 per cent in the quarter, analysts said, and will likely have a damaging effect on Nokia’s overall revenue and profit. Industry watchers are already saying that the company is likely to have made a loss of €91.6 million in the fourth quarter, with sales down 21 per cent at around €10 billion, according to Bloomberg.

    Commenting on the decline in Symbian sales, Goldman Sachs analyst Tim Boddy issued a note claiming that Nokia remains in a challenging transition period. “First-half device sales are likely to be soft as Lumia demand ramps up only gradually and Symbian declines steepen,” he wrote.

    This worry regarding Lumia sales volumes has been highlighted by Neil Mawston, a director at research firm Strategy Analytics. Speaking to Dow Jones Newswire, Mawston said investors are focusing too much on Nokia’s latest smartphones so soon after their release, and given they’re only available in a handful of countries.

    “It’s too soon to judge,” Mawston said. “If you look back to Apple’s iPhone performance in 2007 and Google’s Android in 2008, they had a sluggish start the first quarter after launch and people started to write them off, but new models came a year or so later and sales rocketed.”

    For more:
    - see this Bloomberg article
    - see this Dow Jones Newswire article

    Related Articles:
    Report: Nokia under pressure to slash Lumia 710 pricing in UK

    Nokia, Microsoft boosted by bullish Credit Suisse report on Windows Phone
    Nokia’s Elop: Boosting Windows Phone volumes is the top priority
    Rumour Mill: O2 reverses course, agrees to sell Nokia’s Lumia phones in Germany

    FierceWireless

      Verizon Wireless News
      continues, Lumia, Nokia's, promise, sales, show, slide, Symbian
     
  • 10
    Oct 11

    “BBX” appears in presentation slide, possibly the new name of RIM’s QNX BlackBerry platform

      Posted by Admin
      0 comments


    RIM purchased QNX Software Systems back in 2010 for 0 million. At the time the company was solely focused on bringing the web to the automotive market. Over the past few months we’ve seen RIM expand the OS into their PlayBook, and also acknowledge that future BlackBerry smartphones will be powered by QNX.

    During the recent Q2 financial results Mike Lazaridis, RIM co-CEO, said “Development efforts on the first QNX-based smartphone products are going extremely well. We plan to ensure that when we launch the product will have the features, industrial design and content and app ecosystem it needs to deliver a dynamic and industry leading customer experience. The development platform for QNX phones will be presented in more detail at DevCon in October, and prototype phones featuring the QNX operating system and development platform will be available in the not to distant future.”

    Now a slide from the recent QNX Auto Summit in Japan shows the letters “BBX”, this is the abbreviation that RIM is expected to rename the OS, letting go of the familiar BlackBerry OS and possibly bringing the company under one unified brand.

    So it’s certainly a time of transition for RIM, but an exciting transition. It’ll be interesting to see what these new BBX/QNX-based prototype smartphones will be like, both in looks and raw power. Over the past few months rumours surfaced of a touchscreen device with a dual-core processor that goes by the code name of “Colt”.

    The BlackBerry DevCon is happening on October 18th in San Fransisco.

    Source: CrackBerry

    Related posts:

    1. Audio: Lazaridis says BlackBerry QNX-based smartphones “will be available in the not to distant future”
    2. Live from the BlackBerry World 2011 Keynote presentation
    3. CNET: “Priceless” iPhone 5 prototype lost in a bar, possibly sold on Craigslist for 0

    MobileSyrup.com

      Virgin Mobile News
      “BBX”, appears, BlackBerry, Name, platform, possibly, presentation, RIM’s, slide
     
Recent Posts
  • Seeking Therapy For A Cocaine Dependency In A Cleansing Rehab
  • John Rosatti – Business Owner Extraordinaire
  • Travelling To Nicaragua To Surf Volcanoes
  • View The Salt Cathedral Of Zipaquira
  • Acquiring An Expedited United States Passport For An International Voyage
Recent Comments
  • Mr WordPress says: Hi, this is a comment.
    To delete a comment, just log in and view the...
Tags

Android Apple Apps AT&ampT AT&T Bargaining BlackBerry Call contract Data deal Droid Election from Galaxy Google iPad iPhone Jobs June Launch Mobile more Motorola Network NEWS over phone Public Report Rights Samsung Senate Sprint TMobile TS2R Union Update Verizon Video Vote Week Windows Wireless Workers

Feed
  •    Posts Feed
  •    Comments Feed
  • Categories

    • Android News
    • AT&T News
    • IPhone News
    • Sprint PCS News
    • Uncategorized
    • Verizon Wireless News
    • Virgin Mobile News
  • Blogroll

    • Best Man Speech
    • Mens Watches
    • US Passport Now
    • Green Bay Packers

Copyright © zcallingcard.com