The pattern calls for order. Although yesterday we told you between these same lines that Nokia Australia had strictly ruled out that the first Nokia with Windows Phone would see the light in 2011, now it has been Stephen Elop, the CEO of the Finnish firm, who has denied those statements, and it does so by sharing the plans the company has to open this new and long-awaited stage.
With full confidence, the Canadian manager ensures that Nokia's Windows Phone line will be released worldwide in the "fourth quarter of the year," as he was able to say in statements to a Chinese media. Likewise, he pointed out that the first models of this new series of phones can be seen at Nokia World 2012, the company's annual event that will take place next October in London.
Elop also pointed out that the launch strategy that they will adopt for the arrival of Nokia's Windows Phones will be sequential, so that the new line is launched in a staggered manner in the different countries where the arrival of the new mobile phones is projected. Espoo signature.
Likewise, the head of Nokia is very optimistic about the projection of this new stage, ensuring that he believes that success is guaranteed by “Nokia's unique capabilities, as well as the quality of its designs and the strength it brings to its products. the company as an organization ”.
Some keys to the strategy of the Nokia Windows Phone ecosystem were also advanced to consider themselves as an alternative to others, affirming Elop that the experience of this environment revolves around the user, the people, compared to the philosophy of other platforms, which revolve around to applications.
The idea, outlined the head of the firm, is that all the utilities of Nokia phones with Windows Phone are integrated with each other so that the user is not limited to having a library of apps with various functions, but that all are coordinated to provide the owner of the terminal a more complete experience.
As for MeeGo, there was not much news from Stephen Elop. He limited himself to saying that they are very enthusiastic about the good reception that the Nokia N9 (the first commercial terminal that works with the Intel and Nokia platform) had in its presentation, and is expectant about the way it can work in the different markets where it is offered for sale. However, he did not say a word about the place that the company reserves for this platform or if we will see more devices in the future.