From The Register:
Five years have passed but the wounds left by the acquisition and dismemberment of Europe's biggest technology company at the hands of Microsoft remain open.
Nokia today is a considerable multinational, of course, booking €23.15bn in FY2017. But that's around half of what Nokia was at its peak in 2007 (€51.6bn). It's the intangibles that have been lost: Nokia was a trailblazer, the speaker of a global language that could sell electronics to every class or culture, and the pride of Finland – a nation most Americans couldn't find on a map before the 1990s. Many probably still can't.
(On arriving in San Francisco in 1999, I remember my Chinese-American buildings manager, a great technology enthusiast, telling me: "I love Nokia – I love all Japanese technology.")
Almost all of the 32,000 employees of Nokia's phone division subsequently lost their jobs, and CEO Stephen Elop was personally vilified as the agent in an elaborate conspiracy theory.
[...] The axe soon started swinging.
It was painful. Nadella had wanted to cut the fat from Microsoft even without the addition of Nokia's phone unit – which included not just the smartphones but the dumbphones that Microsoft never wanted, too, as well as manufacturing plants in South Korea, China, Hungary, India, Mexico and Vietnam.
(Score: 2, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 12 2018, @05:03PM (2 children)
If we assume that Nokia knew that the phone arm was doomed, selling out to MS and pivoting the remaining operations to other areas without being responsible for downsizing costs was a pretty canny move.
(Score: 2) by jmorris on Wednesday September 12 2018, @08:10PM
Ok, that is a different thought on this. Blame shift. They certainly seem to have survived in some form, certainly in better shape than BlackBerry and lets not even discuss the sad fate of Palm. So yeah, I'll buy it.
(Score: 2) by takyon on Wednesday September 12 2018, @10:26PM
Yup. All attempts to compete with Android and iOS have failed or been non-starters. See Tizen, Sailfish OS, Firefox OS. And the Android manufacturers are in a crowded market with low margins and a lot of competitors. Those that aren't in the top 5 or so are competing for crumbs. And less crumbs, since the market is becoming saturated and people are using their phones longer [bloomberg.com].
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]