Reactions for Google's purchase of Motorola this week come from all fronts in the fierce battle for the smartphone sector. From the Finnish trenches they have not been waiting for some statements that, in the mouth of the CEO of Nokia, Stephen Elop, come to put fear in the body of Google's current partners in the manufacture of terminals.
As Elop stated during a ceremony in Helsinki, the companies dedicated to working with the Android system (companies producing terminals and service operators) should have transferred their uncertainties (justified, for Nokia's employer) to those responsible for the multinational of Mountain View, as a sign of distrust for the play that was communicated earlier in the week.
The truth is that the reaction of the main companions of Google in the adventure Android have expressed their views on a totally opposite tone to what he considers Elop. And it is that Samsung, LG, HTC and Sony Ericsson, main manufacturers of Android phones, have affirmed that the acquisition of Motorola by Google will serve to strengthen the presence and position of the green robot ecosystem in the market, something that plays in favor of the interests of these companies.
Meanwhile, at Nokia the clock continues its countdown until the premiere of the company's first mobile that works with Microsoft's operating system, Windows Phone. In July, a terminal was seen that Stephen Elop himself referred to as Nokia Sea Ray or Nokia C-Ray, and in recent days we have known a list of future launches that would be followed by a certain Nokia 800. Unfortunately, at the moment the benefits that we will find in the deans of the new generation of terminals of the Finnish firm are not known.