31 December 2013

My Nokia Blog

My Nokia Blog


Video: Hands on the 6″ Nokia Lumia 1320 (Vietnamese)

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 09:00 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 16.57.46

Here’s a buttery bokeh hands on look at the Nokia Lumia 1320, Nokia’s second phablet after the 1520 but gunning for a very affordable sector.

Tinh Tế

Nokia-Microsoft deal held up by China?

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 08:51 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 16.50.57

I thought this story was already written but it seems not. It’s quite an old one now but in case you did miss it too, the Nokia-MS deal is facing some delay in China. China fears that when the D&S division is under MS control, Nokia will have no problems asserting their IP rights.

Thus for the deal to go through, China may be looking for a guaranteed limit on patent fees.

The US and Europe have approved the deal already. Europe however will be closely monitoring Nokia for post-merger licensing practices under EU antitrust rules.

Source: Bloomberg

Cheers All for the tip

FossPatents: Nokia wins German patent injunction against ALL HTC Android devices. Enforceable against 400 million euro bond.

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 08:45 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 16.43.26

HTC is getting hit left right and centre, by Samsung on Android, by Nokia in WP (and patents) and internally with their VPs leaking things.

The latest bash comes in from Nokia again who has won a German patent injunction against ALL HTC Android devices.

Cheers Prashant for the tip!

Leakyleak: Nokia Lumia 635 screenshot (4G, 1GB RAM?)

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 08:43 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 16.37.59

Here’s a screenshot from the single sim variant of Moneypenny. Note that it shows a single sim 4G, 6:35 in the name. Prashant notes that Asphalt 8 is shown which might indicate that the device has 1GB RAM due to to Asphalt 8 not yet being optimised for 512mb(?). However, given that the 525 has 1GB RAM, we should expect the newer refresh to have this too.

As noted, below, the on screen buttons are also visible.

https://twitter.com/evleaks/status/417623674091352064/photo/1

Cheers Alvester and Prashant for the tip.

The Nokia Class of 2013

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 04:29 AM PST

Nokia just tweeted a pic of all of their 2013 handsets. 13, unlucky for some might be the last year of a Nokia branded smartphone. Anyway, here they are.

It’s nice to see a solid line up of some great devices. Whilst it looks like a lot, remember back when Nokia was launching 30, 40+ devices a year? That was ok in the time Nokia was hyper dominant as Nokia catered for various consumers. The choice wasn’t Nokia vs Motorola vs Siemens (remember them?) but Nokia vs Nokia vs Nokia.

Unfortunately with complacency Nokia’s offerings weren’t as compelling and folks started looking elsewhere. We needed Nokia to focus on getting the basic recipe right first. In 2013 it felt like Nokia was on the right path. Hailing of positive reviews…the main issue was just being able to get these devices into people’s hands.

Anyway, I’ll leave it at this (posting from 1020 :) )

Video: Brighter low light video with Lumia Black on Nokia Lumia 1020?

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 12:44 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 08.35.41

Steve does a quick comparison with the Nokia Lumia 1020, one on Amber, the other on Lumia Black. In daytime, performances are pretty much the same but in low light, there are some slight changes.

The performance improvements lie in how the software chooses exposure, which made the video much darker than it could be.

Video capture under Nokia Black seems to use a higher ISO per video frame, resulting in higher digital noise but a brighter image to the viewer. Note in the street footage that the caravan across the road isn’t even visible in the Amber video footage but can be seen clearly with Black.

http://allaboutwindowsphone.com/features/item/19007_Low_light_video_capture_improv.php

Steve notes that he is using two different models of 1020s from different continents but he doesn’t think that should cause an issue. Well, as long as they’re roughly the same age batch. If you remember before, Marc from PVC had a replacement over his first batch 1020, and the newer one was significantly better.

Cheers Alvester for the tip!

Lumiapps: Grab Amazing Weather HD for FREE today only

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 12:34 AM PST

 

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 08.30.44

I’m not sure quite how long is left, but for today, Amazing Weather HD is available for FREE. it’s one of the best looking paid weather apps out there so grab it today.

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 08.32.09

 

http://www.windowsphone.com/en-us/store/app/amazing-weather-hd/c7ac43c5-5d99-4e65-913d-e92e253e9e99

Via WMPU

Cheers Alvester for the tip!

30 December 2013

My Nokia Blog

My Nokia Blog


Nokia Lumia 920 “Jailbreak” coming soon? Video of triple icon screen

Posted: 29 Dec 2013 01:35 PM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-29 at 21.26.46

 

Quick heads up, the Nokia Lumia 920 “Jailbreak” is said to be coming soon. Not sure if this is technically a ‘jailbreak’, but it does offer some new freedom as is it were, e.g. triple column homescreen. That should be an option from the start, no?

More details over at: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2585811

Original video link: http://www.tudou.com/programs/view/69dqsXI_qTo/?resourceId=85574071_06_02_99

WindowsMania.pl

Cheers Alvester for the tip!

PVC Marc plays about with Lightroom on DNG RAW files from Nokia Lumia 1520

Posted: 29 Dec 2013 01:50 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-29 at 00.37.45

As Marc from The PureViewClub grows to the more professional side of mobile photography, he has been testing out what he can do with some RAW shots he’s taken on the Nokia Lumia 1520.

http://pureviewclub.com/2013/19912

Marc’s brother helped to get him started on Adobe Lightroom with these two shots, the first being the 5MP shot and the second the edited RAW shot. Whilst only a short time was spent editing, Marc says he was impressed with the result.

I think it’s great to have these options. Whilst most may prefer to just take the shot and leave it as is, for those who want to post process, they can take it to the extreme.

29 December 2013

My Nokia Blog

My Nokia Blog


Review: The Jolla

Posted: 28 Dec 2013 08:24 PM PST

Jolla_Front

I’ve been extremely privileged to test drive Jolla’s first device, and the first device to ship with Sailfish OS. As a strong advocate for the Nokia N9 and MeeGo Harmattan, I was excited to try the phone out, even if it was only for three days.  Jolla, the Finnish start-up consisting of mainly ex-Nokia employees, took what they knew, both as device makers and consumers, and went down a path to create a device and OS unlike anything on the market.

Jolla_Base

Starting with the hardware, the Jolla has a 4.5″ IPS LCD display, at a qHD resolution of 960 x 540. A 2100mAh battery keeps the device juiced up, while it runs at 1.4GHz on it’s Qualcomm Dual-Core chip. To store all your data, you get 16GB internal storage, and MicroSD expandable options. Photography is standard on the spec side, sporting a 8MP rear camera, and a 2MP front facing for getting some decent selfies.

Jolla_Left

I wasn’t the biggest fan of photos taken with the phone, though this can all be tweaked with some software enhancements I am sure – just like we’ve seen with the Lumia range. Here a few samples I took around the house and out in the city on the weekend (full set of samples and screenshots are here). The pictures below are all on Auto settings (flash on/off depending on shot) – though the Camera app on Sailfish doesn’t have many settings anyway which is upsetting. [Note: Camera improvements have been made as of 1.0.2.5]

Without Flash

With Flash

Jolla has given it a unique twist, designing what they’ve termed, The Other Half. It is essentially a removable back, though the back side of the device itself, has ports and connectors that allows device functionality to be extended. Currently, the device ships with a White Other Half (or Poppy Red if you got the pre-order) and it changes your device’s Ambience (I’ll get to that a little later).

Jolla_Back

The phone has no physical buttons on the screen, instead running an OS that utilises gestures for navigating the UI. On the right side, you have a power/lock key, and volume rocker, with the left and base being flush. Up top, you have the 3.5mm audio jack port, and MicroUSB slot for charging and data transfer.

Jolla_Top

You get your typical connectivity options, Bluetooth, WiFi, Mobile Data (3G/LTE – depends on the frequency your country supports obviously), and NFC as well as i2c via The Other Half expandability options. (Can even be tweaked to wirelessly charge.) I was rather disappointed with the speakers, finding them to not be very loud at all.

Jolla_Back_No_TOH

Moving over to the software side of things, Jolla runs off Jolla’s self-developed Sailfish OS. Based off of Mer, the community build of MeeGo, Sailfish seems to be the evolutionary step to Harmattan, that was introduced on the N9 in 2011 – and rightly so given that most involved on that product are heading Jolla.

Typically, OSes are arranged with a lock screen sitting above home screens, which are running horizontally, with a launcher stack on top of that, and app windows on top of that. Sailfish is a little different. The lock screen heads the home screen, which is layed out vertically.

As you swipe to unlock, you get shown the time, device charge, network signal, chat presence, bluetooth status, gps etc. On the homescreen, you can swipe from top (just above the screen) to bottom to lock the device. You only ever really need to use the power key to turn on/off the phone. (To unlock, you have that awesome double tap to wake gesture.)

Carry on further and you see the multitasking screen and a quick launcher for 4 of your favourite apps. The multitasking is a card like view, that shows the currently open apps. It will show the 4 most recent, then make the cards smaller and show up to 9. Dragging further you see the rest of your app launcher.

The multitasking aspect of Sailfish OS is something remarkable. Not only is it real time, meaning you can see the apps updating while in the card view, but there is a feature called Active Covers. What this is, is a custom card view for the app, that allows you to carry out up to two actions on that app without the need for going inside (or jump to a feature).

For example, the Music player allows you to pause, and skip track without the need to even open the app. Where as the Phone app allows you to open directly to the dialler, or to your contacts list. Simple, yet makes getting things done, and where you need to go inside apps, quick and rather effortless.

Sailfish OS has another unique interaction, in its pulley/push menus, and the gestures to navigate back a page, or forward to accept options. The pulley is handy for being able to access settings without looking, due to the haptic and audio feedback. Its a standardised way to access various options throughout the OS, and has even been adopted by almost all third party apps. My only issue is that 4/5 times trying to swipe to close an app, the pulley menu is dragged down instead. Also in some apps with a scrollable UI, the pulley is drawn instead of scrolling content (though thats just poor app design by the third-party devs – easily fixed).

Whilst on the subject of third-party apps, Sailfish has the ability to run Android apps, similar to BB10. Where it differs though is in the way it runs these apps. Sailfish essentially runs an Android Virtual Machine, meaning your apps inside the Android layer can all talk to each other, and act as a single app on your device, with various processes for the Android apps. For example, you can enter the Android layer, and use the multitasking virtual key and see the open apps. This does mean though, that you close all Android apps when you close one (using the swipe down to close gesture or the X in multitasking view).

Switching between languages in the keyboard is as easy as holding the space bar, though I have found that text input is generally rather average (and with a fair bit of the UI locked to portrait, you can’t create SMS with the keyboard in landscape).

 

While Messages combines your SMS with Chat (Facebook, XMPP etc), Sailfish is yet to support MMS, which is a shame given its such a basic feature.

Email was also a bit of a let down. Whilst it is set out really well, most richly formatted (html) emails are pretty much useless. Links don’t work, and it just shows text everywhere. I’m sure this will be improved as time goes along, but for first impressions (and I’m limited on time for this review) it is a big issue in my books. I’ve also had trouble sending emails with attachments – having the email occasionally sent repeatedly (thankfully it was only to myself). [Note: Email has been updated (1.0.2.5) so this may have been fixed]

Battery life isn’t the best, though it is greatly improved given the right conditions. I averaged about 7 hours of heavier than normal usage, though managed to drain it in as little as 3, with a flaky 3g connection, no wifi, Bluetooth, GPS and online in my Chat accounts. (A tip for battery saving is to kill the Other Half detection service.) My longest battery life has been 16 hours.

Ambience, as mentioned earlier, is possibly the most unique feature of the Jolla’s Operating System. Sailfish allows you to choose an image, and creates a theme based on predominant and secondary colours. The UI is semi transparent throughout, so you will always see your wallpaper. It does make the phone seem super personal. You have the choice to set the a few Ambiences as favourite, accessible from the Home Screen by swiping from just outside either side of the device to the other.

There are built in services, that you can set up during initial boot, or later on via Settings, such as Facebook, Twitter, Google, XMPP etc, with the option to add Exchange via a Store download. Whilst Facebook and Twitter are there, they have no native app (third party excluded), inside the events feed, you will see notifications, though it will open the browser – which I found could be a bit laggy.

Most of these services are integrated throughout the OS in various ways, namely through the share feature in various apps (like Gallery). A let down is that png files can’t be shared from the Gallery. This makes it hard to tweet screenshots from the current OS build.

For the N9 user, there are lots to love and that you’ll find familiar. It does seem like the natural next step. Unlike the N9 and Harmattan though, tinkering isn’t as easy to fix. Due to the way that Sailfish has been developed, whilst still Open Source, means there are close sourced components Jolla can’t distribute. As a result, there is no Flashing utility like the N9. If you’d like to find out more about it, read this post from TMO.

“Pull down to add document” – Umm, there’s no pulley menu

There are little things of the Jolla and Sailfish that got on my nerves, though, as you use it, you find you tend to like it more and more, and those niggles, become less annoying. (I assume its because you get used to it.) The phone and OS are clearly aimed at a niche target, and as such, if you want a phone that will just work out of the box and do EVERYTHING, then this isn’t want you’re looking for.

However, if you like to fiddle with your phone, and discover some hidden beauty, as well as be unlike everyone else, then the Jolla is worth a look. Personally, I find the device is priced too high for its capabilities, though I hope the fact that Sailfish still retains a BETA tag, means it will only get better as the days go on. (And look, we’ve already seen 3 updates in a month)

Massive shoutout to Jolla for graciously loaning me the device, despite being on the other side of the globe. You guys rock!

 

 

 

 

 

Finnish born father of Linux, Linus Torvalds, celebrates his birthday today

Posted: 28 Dec 2013 05:12 AM PST

 

Although Finland is (was?) probably best known for being the home of Nokia, one of the other strong roots that also connect the two is Linus Torvalds, father of the Linux kernel.

Nokia has dabbled in Linux based smartphones on their internet tablets, my favourite being the Nokia N900. Maemo 5 on the N900 is still one of my favourite experiences and the N900 is one of my top 5 Nokias to date. The N9 was Nokia’s first MeeGo device for the consumer (N950 for the developers). MeeGo was the combination of two Linux efforts between Intel and Nokia. Now the future of MeeGo lies partly on Sammy with Tizen and the likes of Jolla with Sailfish. Whilst the desktop is dominated by Windows, mobile is in the hands of Android – an OS built on the massive contribution of the open-source Linux community.

Where would all that be without Linus? Perhaps Symbian would still be number 1 :p nHD ftw! :p

Linus was last reported to be an owner of Android handset and has previously stated that Nokia should have gone Android – though he did understand why Nokia went with WP.   In 2012, he was awarded the Millennium Technology Prize in Finland for the creation of Linux.

Via, via

Forbes’ Ewan Spence: 24H with the Jolla Smartphone

Posted: 28 Dec 2013 03:51 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-28 at 11.44.35

Another first impression with the newest OS on the block, the Sailfish powered Jolla Smartphone, courtesy of Ewan Spence at Forbes.

Ewan is of course no stranger to smartphones, a long time veteran and writer at AAS during the glory Symbian days. He supported Jolla during their early days and his order arrived just before the holidays.

An in-depth review is coming in January. Unlike Pocketnow who had a review unit for only 5 days, this Jolla phone is Ewan’s own.

For now, Ewan’s first impressions span a two page preview:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/ewanspence/2013/12/27/first-thoughts-review-of-the-jolla-linux-smartphone

 

Weekend Watch: Girl in a box unboxes the Nokia Lumia 1020

Posted: 28 Dec 2013 03:44 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-28 at 11.40.14

It’s been some time now since the 1020′s launch so you’re probably more than aware of the box contents. But nevertheless you might find it entertaining, particularly as it starts off which the unboxer in a box herself.  The video is in Spanish by clipset and it’s already had over 16K views.

Nos ha costado, pero aquĂ­ estĂ¡. el Nokia Lumia 1020. Un movilgrĂ¡fico tan interesante como los 41 megapĂ­xeles de su sensor. La gran apuesta de Nokia (y Microsoft) por hacerse un hueco entre los grandes smartphones del año. A ver si nos alegra el dĂ­a

clipset·

Weekend Watch: Nokia Lumia 1020 in Marques’ Top 5 Smartphones for 2013

Posted: 28 Dec 2013 03:24 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-28 at 11.16.06

 

Marques Brownlee’s unofficial top 5 picks (in no specific order) of the top smartphones puts the Nokia Lumia 1020 amongst the likes of the Note 3, HTC One, Moto X, and Nexus 5.

The 1020 has that memorable 41MP camera which he says you don’t really see in the whilst, be it in DSLR or a smartphone (yes, no one really knows about 808 PureView anymore).

But the main point is how it changed everyone’s views on high end smartphone cameras (except perhaps Nokia fans who have been used to Nokia cameras)

Marques Brownlee

Weekend Watch: Nokia Lumia 1520 | Fly or Die

Posted: 28 Dec 2013 03:09 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-28 at 11.02.00

Here’s good ol’ TechCrunch with their Fly or Die on the Nokia Lumia 1520. Whilst the guy in red is giving some fair feedback, the guy in blue is just complaining for the sake of it. Even the guy in red thinks so and says he’s just being contrary for the sake of it. Disliking it but having a reason would make more sense.

Most recently an independent review by GSM Arena praises the 1520 as a phablet worth having.

28 December 2013

My Nokia Blog

My Nokia Blog


Microsoft Releases Classic Minesweeper, Solitaire, and Mahjong Games for WP

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 02:14 PM PST

1bf0351c-2cae-422d-bac4-e31a78c942ebAnyone growing up with a PC in the late 90′s remembers playing endless hours of minesweeper, solitaire and a whole lot of pinball on their Window machine. Now Microsoft have released these games for WP8 with xbox achievements in all of them. (and all free).  Grab them from the links below:

Solitaire collection:

Scan with Windows Phone

http://www.windowsphone.com/en-us/store/app/microsoft-solitaire-collection/282592d5-5c50-496d-921e-b6ef523ad4d9

Minesweeper:

Scan with Windows Phone

http://www.windowsphone.com/en-us/store/app/microsoft-minesweeper/c430a852-e19b-43e8-a34e-6c33f7b1df3e

 

Mahjong Tiles:

Scan with Windows Phone

http://www.windowsphone.com/en-us/store/app/microsoft-mahjong/3533f0fe-4110-4a87-95c2-50b869b2845e

 

Happy gaming.

Via

 

Sailfish Update to 1.0.2.5 #Jolla

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 05:28 AM PST

jolla

 

There’s an update available for Sailfish OS to v1.0.2.5.

New changes:

  • Google calendar sync to your Jolla (one way)
  • Camera support in Android apps
  • Updating/uninstalling apps from Yandex store
  • Camera now supports all 4 orientations
  • Advanced recovery mode [details]
  • Ability to accept any server certificates during Exchange ActiveSync account setup

 

Camera also apparently sees some improvements in exposure time and low light focusing with better switching between front and main camera.

There also seems to be quite a few bugfixes.

Source: JollaSuomi

MNB RG: Nokia CTO office mystery: Android? Meltemi? Wearables?

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 03:10 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-27 at 11.07.34

Janne takes on the task to write about the possibility of Meltemi, Android and Wearables.   Cheers Janne!

A new kind of rhetoric has been rising in the Nokia blogosphere after the Microsoft Devices & Services acquisition news: discussion of the Nokia CTO (Chief Technology Officer) office and projects therein. Nokia CTO office, headed by longtime Nokia Research Center boss and a PhD of considerable academic credentials Henry Tirri, is of course important in the wake of the D&S news, because it will remain with Nokia. Whatever Nokia is cooking directly under its highest technology leadership, will remain in-house even after the Microsoft deal is (expected to be) completed (barring Chinese interference, it seems).

In some past MNB write-ups, I have explored Nokia’s possible post-D&S paths. In the very first one, “Will cars soon be tracked by Nokia black boxes? Jorma Ollila heads a car tracking taskforce”

(http://mynokiablog.com/2013/10/19/mnb-rg-will-cars-soon-be-tracked-by-nokia-black-boxes-jorma-ollila-heads-a-car-tracking-taskforce/)

I explored the possibility of Nokia being somehow behind the initiatives to tax cars in Finland based on their location. Apparently this kind of work is not only getting lift in Finland, but e.g. in Germany as well. Since then at least one list of companies making proposals to the taskforce has been made public, and Nokia/HERE were not on the list, so no further confirmation for this angle has been received – of course we don’t know if HERE plays a part in the listed companies work. Still, it seems plausible HERE – as one of Nokia’s remaining pillars – would remain interested in work inside this area. Whether HERE has anything to do with, directly or indirectly, with the Finnish plans is unknown. For all we know, Nokia could still be considering spinning HERE off entirely.

In my second and third stories, “New Nokia HERE interview – and what is Nokia Guru, really?”

(http://mynokiablog.com/2013/10/24/new-nokia-here-interview-and-what-is-nokia-guru-really/)

and “What will the post-D&S-sale Nokia look like?”

(http://mynokiablog.com/2013/10/25/mnb-rg-what-will-the-post-ds-sale-nokia-look-like/)

I took a broader look at what will remain at Nokia after the D&S unit is sold to Microsoft. Current NSN and HERE operations of course being the obvious ones, but more interestingly talk behind future Nokia consumer products was gaining some wind. While the Nokia Guru I mentioned in this context was later revealed to be nothing more than a Bluetooth headset that will probably transfer over to Microsoft (Nokia Treasure Tag is still unreleased though), Nokia HERE boss Michael Halbherr’s comments about Nokia releasing future consumer devices that "do a few things well" still stands.

In the latter article I also mentioned the CTO office when discussing the third pillar (after NSN and HERE) of the “new Nokia”, Advanced Technologies: “Advanced Technologies is, really, what remains of Nokia's Future Disruptions, CTO office and Nokia Research Center after the tumult of the last few years. Nokia dubbed it "a leader in technology development and licensing”…” In the fourth story, “Nokia planning "bounceback", "new weapons"”

(http://mynokiablog.com/2013/11/26/mnb-reader-generated-nokia-planning-bounceback-new-weapons/),

the man himself – head of Nokia’s CTO office Henry Tirri – was being interviewed in a link. Henry Tirri talks about the kinds of innovations Nokia Research Center has worked on and how Nokia could bring them to market themselves or through licensing to others.

Parallel to and since these stories, a few interesting additions about the Nokia CTO office have surfaced. First one was, quite a long time ago, when infamous MNB contributor Random Random tipped us that Nokia had moved some Meltemi people after its cancellation (for a bit more about Meltemi, see:

http://mynokiablog.com/2012/05/14/mnb-reader-generated-nokias-low-end-strategy-explained/)

to supposedly work on a new, secret project. Random Random indeed tipped this multiple times in conversations here on MNB quite a few months ago. Second interesting tidbit was that Nokia’s Project N/Normandy low-end Android phone project was actually inside the CTO office, not inside the D&S being sold to Microsoft. While the Android phone seems to now be cancelled

(http://mynokiablog.com/2013/12/18/nokia-android-plan-abandoned/),

it is possible the Android project remains at Nokia after the sale. Maybe something could come of it later.
Likewise there has been talk in the past that Meltemi too was a project of the CTO office, not of D&S. In this case, CTO office (including Nokia Research Center) probably means what Nokia used to talk about as their Future Disruptions. Was Meltemi a Future Disruption? Was Project N/Normandy a Future Disruption? Or, more intriguingly, could they still be? We remember Random Random’s tip that people were moved from the Meltemi project to something new. We also recall Meltemi was supposed to be built around some (cloud computing?) innovation? Could it have lived on longer? In probably the wildest twist to this story, alias Eero and his blog Eeron Nokia (http://eeronnokia.blogspot.fi/) suggest Meltemi indeed at least was alive recently (http://eeronnokia.blogspot.fi/2013/12/meltemi-on-hyllytetty.html) and might be related to Nokia wearables in 2014 (http://eeronnokia.blogspot.fi/2013/12/nokia-meltemi-puettavaan-teknologiaan.html). Even a new brandname of Nokia Crystal (http://eeronnokia.blogspot.fi/2013/12/nokian-alylasien-nimeksin-tulee-crystal.html) was suggested. Of course, this could be just pure fantasy.

Indeed, it is quite possible, likely even, none of the speculation or leaks collected in this article are accurate – some probably are completely false. However, a pattern seems to be emerging that what was once known as Nokia Research Center, then Future Disruptions, then just talk of the “CTO office”, now Advanced Technologies, may at least have been plotting Nokia’s return to consumer goods – and might still be. Might it manifest itself in the form of wearable Nokia technology or other Nokia consumer products in 2014? I guess the possibility isn’t completely within the realm of fantasy, as distant as it now in the aftermath of the D&S sale might seem.

Finally, while the eyes of the world are on Microsoft’s CEO selection, more relevantly for us here on My *Nokia* Blog, we shouldn’t forget Nokia too has a CEO to select. The current CEO/President combo of (Chairman) Risto Siilasmaa and (CFO) Timo Ihamuotila is just a temporary one. At the same time, Nokia’s board is said to be involved in strategy work around the new strategy of the company – some fruits of which expected to be announced once the Microsoft deal is finalized early next year. Will that strategy include consumer products directly from Nokia and, if so, under what brand? Will they come in the form of wearables? Maybe run Meltemi or Android? Or will Nokia simply abandon consumer products and concentrate on licensing their technology research to others?

Nokia Lumia 1320 sales begin this week

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 02:57 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-27 at 10.52.32

When Nokia started on their proper phablets (4.7″ 625 doesn’t count) Nokia went with the all guns blazing 1520 but also the more modest, value centric 1320.

NokConv reports that sales of this handset begins this week.

  • 6″ 720p display (Same as LG G flex btw)
  • Dual Core 1.7GHz
  • MicroSD card slot
  • Same triple column tile (it’s about screen size rather than resolution)
  • Same size battery as 1520 and we know how well that did in GSM Arena’s battery test, topping the endurance ratings.
  • 339USD unsubsidized price.

Video: Nokia Lumia 1520 gets the Rozetka treatment (Russian)

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 02:44 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-27 at 10.40.38

When we first got a Rozetka review, despite it being in Russian, it was great to watch as it was very well put together. Here’s their take on the Nokia Lumia 1520.

Their links lead to a Ukrainian retailer which has very positive user reviews of the 1520.

Rozetka.ua

Video: Nokia Lumia 1520 vs BlackBerry Z30 (Italian)

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 02:37 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-27 at 10.35.06

Here’s a comparison between the Nokia Lumia 1520 and the BlackBerry Z30. Both are each respective company’s attempts at a bigger screen device.

 

batista70

Nokia Poland animated promo for Beaver Ride game on Nokia Lumia 1520

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 02:31 AM PST

Screen Shot 2013-12-27 at 10.27.43

 

Here’s Nokia Poland’s promo for the game, Beaver Ride on the Nokia Lumia 1520.

http://www.windowsphone.com/pl-pl/store/app/beaver-ride/dd2b52f5-74d2-410c-a66b-8620322a21bd