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Microsoft The Almighty Buck

Nokia Shareholders Fight Back 424

MohammedSameer writes "A group of nine young Nokia shareholders are fighting back. They posted an open letter for Nokia shareholders and investors asking to be elected in order to bring sanity back. They are also planning to challenge the company's strategy and partnership with Microsoft."
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Nokia Shareholders Fight Back

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:15PM (#35211640)

    Sell NOK

    Buy GOOG

  • by Nursie ( 632944 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:18PM (#35211664)

    Just to join int, try to stop the company that made the best, most reliable phones for the longest time from being sold down the river by an MS plant.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Tell that to SGI. Or have we forgotten Ricky "I love Gates" Belluzzo?

    • Joining ints is really efficient, as opposed to joining strings. Well done.
    • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:23PM (#35211754)
      But if they're successful in thwarting the Microsoft takeover, then what? Arrive late at the Android party? Sell dumbphones for $14.99 at Target? Everybody criticises companies like Silicon Graphics for sticking with the old strategy too long, but also for jumping on the bandwagon (such as SGI taking a stab on NT).

      Being outmoded is an extremely difficult position to be in.

      • Better late than never.

        They should catch up after a few phones.

      • majority of the world is still buying those 'dumphones' you speak of, and have no problem with them.
        • by igb ( 28052 )
          But at 5% margin on a wholesale price of a few tens of dollars, you'd need everyone in the world to buy a new one every year to fund an $8bn/yr R&D habit.
      • by Nursie ( 632944 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:35PM (#35211952)

        Umm, no. They were in the lead for smartphones for quite a while (decade perhaps) and there's no reason not to be on top again.

        Outside the US they're still a well respected brand with a good market. RTFA for a good strategy. The last thing nokia need to become is a handset manufacturer for MS.

        The 'old' strategy was aimless development of so many different handsets it was nuts. They need to focus in on a real strategy.

        • by v1 ( 525388 )

          wow. that strategy letter was quite impressive. Bold, decisive, concrete, committed. Just what good leadership needs. Hope the best for them!

          • by Nexus7 ( 2919 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @01:07PM (#35212404)

            Indeed. I was impressed with the lack of silly metaphors, such as "burning oil platforms."

          • by TopherC ( 412335 )

            I liked parts of the letter too, but I can't easily judge how much wisdom (or lack thereof) is being expressed. There seemed to be a lot of exaggerations but to some extent that's the norm for corporate management-speak. A couple easy examples:

            Return the company to a strategy that seeks high growth and high profit margins through innovation and overwhelmingly superior products with unrivaled user experience.

            This strikes me as a particularly desperate statement that struggles against reality.

            Dramatically increase efficiency by eliminating outdated and bureaucratic R&D practices like geographically distributed software development and outsourcing.

            How dramatic? Isn't outsourcing done (like it or not) to reduce costs? Distributed software development can be made to work fairly well. Multiple R&D sites allow you to attract ta

        • by commodore6502 ( 1981532 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @01:20PM (#35212630)

          >>>The 'old' strategy was aimless development of so many different handsets it was nuts.

          Apple circa 1995, when they were on the verge of bankruptcy. Commodore circa 1993 and they did go bankrupt. Too many models can confuse customers - better to focus on just a few.

        • by downhole ( 831621 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @03:27PM (#35214224) Homepage Journal

          You're saying there's no reason they can't be on top again? I can think of plenty of reasons. To have a successful modern smartphone OS, you need an application ecosystem. Apple has one. Android has one. Microsoft has a decent shot at building one. Nokia has had phone OSes for many years and has shown no ability to build an app ecosystem on the level that Apple and Android have. I think it's virtually certain that by the time they get anything new out the door, the overall ecosystem will be crowded enough that they won't have a chance, no matter how good the software is. Thus their future is to either get squeezed to death between better smartphones on top from Apple, HTC, Motorola, Samsung, LG, etc and cheaper Chinese phones on bottom, or to adopt either Android or WinPhone 7. I can easily see WinPhone7 being a better deal right now.

          • by Rexdude ( 747457 )

            Nokia's Ovi Store was upto 4 million downloads a day [mobileperry.com] and growing, by the end of January. Remember that when Ovi Store was launched, it already had a huge base of Symbian smartphones to run on in several countries around the world.Given time (don't know if they had it), it would have grown into a decent ecosystem on its own.
            Nokia has tied up with 103 operators across 32 countries to support direct operator billing - so the apps you buy are charged to your monthly mobile bill instead of the risk of having to

      • by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:37PM (#35211964) Journal

        The battle is on for the third tier phone OS. iOS and Android are the top two, everything else is an "also ran". This includes Palm's offering, Meego, Symbian, and WP7. You have four legitimate third tier phone OSes, two are offerings of Nokia.

        As for the other two, Microsoft would have to pay me to make a phone WP7(radioactive), and Palm's WebOS will only come on HP products (yawn). This leave Nokia with two viable third tier products, one Open source and similar enough to Android, and too far behind it to really matter, and Symbian, the $14.99 walmart phone.

        Nokia has lost the Smartphone market. UNLESS they do Android, and make a phone that is unlocked, easily rootable and with a "we support users not telcos" attitude.

        • by Nursie ( 632944 )

          Why is Symbian the 14.99 walmart OS?

          Why is meego behind?

          Maemo's more capable than any other OS I've seen on a phone.

          • If Meego is superior then where is it? Is it a Marketing Deficiency? I went to buy a smartphone a few months ago, never once ran into a Meego phone, at least not that I know of. Behind means not in front. If I can't find one, without LOOKING for it, and I can't even recall seeing one having gone looking at all the Smartphones that were out there, then it is behind. Quality doesn't matter if it isn't available.

            Symbian is the 14.99 phone because if I wanted a better than 14.99 phone I would get a Smartphone (

            • by idontgno ( 624372 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @01:12PM (#35212488) Journal

              If Meego is superior then where is it? Is it a Marketing Deficiency?

              Eerie coincidence:

              Amiga: at the time of its market debut, vastly superior in technology to its market competitors. Marketed like crap. Fell behind competitors as their technologies advanced past Commodore's anemic R&D.

              Meego: at the time of its market debut, vastly superior in technology to its market competitors. Marketed like crap. Fell behind competitors as their technologies advanced past Nokia's (soon-to-be) anemic R&D.

              Also, the names are disturbingly similar. As I said, eerie coincidence. Maybe.

              Why, yes, I was an Amiga warrior in the platform flamewars of the mid-80s. Why do you ask?

              • Ahhh, Amiga, Mac, Microsoft Flamwars of old. Good times good times.

                Meego sounds like a two year old wanting something .... "meego potty", "meego home", "meego outside" .... "meego phone".

              • by T.E.D. ( 34228 )

                Why, yes, I was an Amiga warrior

                Same here, and it is about the most appropriate example that a person could come up with.

                The Amiga problem really wasn't marketing. The problem was that they had a closed platform, while the PC was an open platform. No matter how much better they started than everyone else (and their lead was huge), they were doomed in the long run because it was just one tiny company trying to out-innovate an entire industry of other companies improving the PC platform. If someone wants to drag out the old videocassete a

        • by Znork ( 31774 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:52PM (#35212190)
          Meego is easily capable of running a Dalvik vm, and Alien Dalvik demonstrates the capability quite throughly. As that would leverage and extend the Android ecosystem, I can't quite see how it would be behind in any way. Essentially it would be the andoid+unlocked+rootable that you're looking for.

          One can see why Microsoft wants Nokia, but for Nokia, going with WP is utter folly; they're dumping their whole current workable and fairly easily fixable lineup for something that nobody wants.

          One can wonder what their plan is if WP gets canned with Ballmer in a not so far away future.
          • My version of "unlocked rootable" means more or less "I don't cater to the carriers, I cater to the person buying the phone". Meaning 'We'll let you update the OS even if the carriers don't want you to". So people getting Android 1.5 phones aren't stuck with Android 1.5 because the carrier locked the phone and isn't going to upgrade it to 2.1. or 2.2, even when it is fully capable.

            That is what I mean. It isn't the geek side of me that says "I want to tether my laptop but the carrier won't let me" type of ro

        • by metamatic ( 202216 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @01:06PM (#35212396) Homepage Journal

          As for the other two, Microsoft would have to pay me to make a phone WP7(radioactive)

          That's exactly why Nokia picked WP7 [computerworld.com].

          • They didn't get enough from Microsoft. I can almost guarantee you that. Microsoft is trying to buy the market, I realized before this post. The problem is, Microsoft isn't buying the phones, Nokia is still going to have to sell them (or try to), and will most likely end up with excess inventory sitting around and whatever Microsoft is paying them won't pay for the production of unsold units. Nokia will be force to dump them on the market or grind them up, neither of which is good for Nokia, and only makes M

      • Exactly. Just witness how well Yahoo! is doing after refusing a buy out.
      • I would vote for taking Android and forking it. That might sound like a crazy move, but at least they can differentiate themselves. Then again if they did that they would probably want to add some sort of compatibility to take advantage of the Android applications.

        The other solution would be like to be to do like HTC: provide both Android and WP7 phones and see what the market wants.

      • You strangely omitted the fact that Nokia is developing two smartphone platforms that are competing with Android: Meego and Symbian. As they predate Android then I really doubt that anyone can accuse Nokia of" arriving late at the Android party".

    • by Yold ( 473518 )

      that made the best

      Past tense. They no longer do. No matter how much "geek cred" their OS has for using QT or whatever Nokia phones use nowadays (haven't even seen one for years), the company is in crisis. Just because us geeks like something, doesn't mean the general public or shareholders will. Windows mobile in the past was absolute garbage, but it looks like their new OS could at least be a contender.

      • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:34PM (#35211932) Homepage

        They still outsell ALL Android phones and Apple phones COMBINED. Nokia is the giant in Cellphones. Outside the usa they are still the first choice as Symbian offers features that Android does not or has not until recently. Honestly even my 3 year old 5800 Nokia smartphone has features that are just showing up for Android, and may some day hit Apple.

        They are hurting, but it's because of management that is worthless and nearly incompetent, and the company not having any direction.

        • Yet Android has the serious momentum. An investment now needs to be in something likely to be worth more, not less, in the future. If Nokia's OS is going to continue to lose market share then other options need to be considered.
        • Honestly even my 3 year old 5800 Nokia smartphone has features that are just showing up for Android

          Please, excuse my laziness for not searching, but could you tell me what features are that? If I had more bucks at that time I would probably buy one of those... but now I am happy with my rooted Android. And no fucking way I would ever buy a windows phone.

          • by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @01:47PM (#35213020) Journal

            Not sure about the 5800, but the one feature I actually care about in my current phone (four-and-a-bit-year-old N90) is that it has a built-in SIP client that integrates with the normal calling stuff, so when I'm near WiFi I can make cheaper calls. And the address book and calendar sync via bluetooth (seriously Apple, a cable for sync? What is this, 1995?). Oh, and tethering as a standard feature (you know, like it has been on every cheap phone I've bought since about 2002).

            None of these are really 'smartphone' features, they're just basic functionality that I've expected in every phone that I've bought (except SIP, which was only standard in my most recent purchase, in 2006), but which seem to be badly integrated optional extras on a lot of newer ones.

        • You are comparing apples to oranges.
          Apple does not make a sub 200$ phone. Not yet at list. I also don't know of any sub-200$ Android phone.
          Maybe you're one of those guys that insists to use his phone only for making calls and that's fine. But you can't ignore the fact that the smartphone market (and its "offspring", the tablet market) is still growing. Nokia is really hurting in that segment. Its offerings are poor, too expensive, or (in the case of tablets) non-existent.
          I've used Nokia phones with Sy
      • The mobile phone market is way larger than the "oooh shiney smart phone" crowd. Nokia are doing fine in the rest of the market.

        Ferrari don't compete against Ford in all vehicle markets, and neither do Landrover. Nokia doesnt have to go toe to toe with Android or Apple, as long as there are people wanting just a phone - Nokia sell plenty of those a day.
        • by RogerWilco ( 99615 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @01:33PM (#35212810) Homepage Journal

          The thing is that there are two problems for Nokia with that:
          1) The low end is slowly being eroded by cheaper offerings from China and India. Their top end is being squeezed out by iOS and Android. In the long run there will be no space between those for Nokia to exist.
          2) Margins. The cheaper less capable phones have very thin margins. Not enough to support any sizeable R&D effort. So that's another reason it's a dead end for Nokia.

          Nokia needs to be in the high end phone market and doing well there to survive in the long run as a mobile device maker.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Desler ( 1608317 )

        Windows mobile in the past was absolute garbage

        Said by someone who most likely never used a WinMo OS. Unlike other phone OS during the formative years of WinMo it was always open for you to install any apps that you like, you could develop apps in C, C++, C#, etc of your choice and you could use frameworks like Qt, you could leverage existing code written against the Win32 API for use in WinMo apps (with some caveats of course) and was very customizable in comparison to almost any other OS for the times. If anything, the OSes running on other smartpho

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Desler ( 1608317 )

          And to add further, on any WinMo phone I ever owned you could do all this without ever needing to "root" the device. So basically even in comparison to the new golden boy "Android" WinMo was in many ways still superior. I'm not sure why a platform that requires any sort of "rooting" and has less application language choices is considered great but one that offers far more freedom of use and development is called "garbage".

        • If anything, the OSes running on other smartphones of the time were far more garbage than WinMo was.

          Just because an OS is flexible doesn't preclude it from being a piece of crap OS for a phone. (Said by someone who HAS owned a WinMo OS device.)

        • by afabbro ( 33948 )

          I used it. WinMo 5 and 6. They were garbage. Painful garbage.

          See, I'm an end-user, not someone who "leverages existing code written against the Win32API". Like 99.9% of phone owners...

      • by LWATCDR ( 28044 )

        Really? Why?
        What does Microsoft bring to the table for a smartphone OS?
        The only strengths I see are XBox Live integration and the Zune Pass.
        The weaknesses are
        1. lagging in features "multitasking, cut and paste, and custom ring tones."
        2. Small library of applications. Heck I bet WebOS still has more.
        3. Limited carriers in the US. Even the IPhone now beats it on that score.
        So why would anybody buy a WP7 device? Mobile Office? Do you really think you will use office on your phone?
        For me the lack of good gmail

        • Having used both a iPhone and also a friend's W7 phone, I can say that the Windows phone was far superior. Just because Apple has better marketing and a built in fanbase doesn't mean Microsoft's product is bad.
    • "MS plant?"

      I can guarantee a strategic decision of this magnitude was made with the full knowledge and consent of Nokia's board of directors: http://www.nokia.com/about-nokia/corporate-governance/board-of-directors [nokia.com]

      Certainly none of them come from Microsoft.

  • by LucidBeast ( 601749 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:19PM (#35211690)
    I think the big guys have enough chips to keep this plan going. No matter what the plans merits are.
  • by toopok4k3 ( 809683 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:21PM (#35211718)
    I guess that a huge drop in the share value might mean that this plan B might get some actual backing from the majority of shareholders. The share has dropped around 20% since the Microsoft announcement.
  • wow 9 people!? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Megor1 ( 621918 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:22PM (#35211732) Homepage
    Why is this even being posted, it's 9 people who let me guess own 0.0000000% of the company? Next up 9 apple share holders want Steve Jobs to stop wearing turtlenecks.
    • It is strange they haven't posted their aggregate ownership of Nokia. It's also odd they are asking for jobs.
      • And they don't even identify themselves. Why would anyone consider electing them to the BoD without knowing who they are?
      • This is actually pretty standard practice.

        Shareholders don't have a ton of tools available to them and waging a proxy fight is pretty much the way to do what these guys want. Usually you try go get your director nominees elected (over the current guys) so that you can make your changes as this is far more effective than trying to get all of your changes passed as a ballot measure.

        They will have to disclose ownership if they meet a threshold..and since they have not, we can assume they don't own a ton o

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Even one share is enough to make some noise about it at the shareholder's meeting. They may not own much, but they speak for quite a crowd, methinks.

    • Re:wow 9 people!? (Score:5, Informative)

      by magarity ( 164372 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @01:07PM (#35212410)

      Why is this even being posted, it's 9 people who let me guess own 0.0000000% of the company?

      Most big companies set the lower limit around 1,000 shares for anyone who wants to bring up any issue for a vote at the company shareholders' meeting. This can be anything from 'I nominate me to the board of directors' to 'presenters should not wear turtlenecks' to 'the company assets should be liquidated and the proceeds given to the homeless'. It then goes to a vote and since institutional investors who own a million shares at a time are there, anything frivolous or absurd gets immediately voted down.

  • "MeeGo smartphones and tablet devices will offer overwhelmingly superior experiences and applications than iOS and Android based competitor products."

    Clearly they have a firm grip on reality. I'm not saying that MeeGo won't be a decent platform, but claiming that it will ovfer an "overwhelmingly superior experience" to the other market leaders who have multi-year head starts is silly.

    • Exactly how old do you think the iPad is? Or for that matter iOS and for that matter Linux is including Linux on mobile devices?

      Simple proof? Which has the most mature and capable media player for FREE? Meego (VLC Mplayer), iOS or Android?

      Thanks for playing: "The world existed before I was born", you loose.

      By your logic, Apple is silly to go with iOS against market leader symbian with multi-year head start. Or android for that matter. Hell ANYONE whoever dared to enter a market. Bit silly of you don't you t

      • By your logic, Apple is silly to go with iOS against market leader symbian with multi-year head start. Or android for that matter.

        Your analogy is only apt if you think MeeGo represents as much of an improvement over iOS and Android as they offered over Symbian when they were first released.

        Do you believe this? If so, why?

    • I'm not saying that MeeGo won't be a decent platform, but claiming that it will ovfer an "overwhelmingly superior experience" to the other market leaders who have multi-year head starts is silly.

      Agreed. The entire strategy hinges on this, and if I were a shareholder (which I'm not) I'd be skeptical of the likelihood of this occurring.

      I've used MeeGo on a netbook, and it's great; it would be interesting to see it come to phones, and more options are always better. But the odds of it becoming even slightly pr

  • Really how much stock do they control? Why do they think they can "fix" Nokia?
    Nokia is in trouble and is loosing market share. They are just about absent in the US and while the US isn't the whole world it is a very big and very rich market.
    Add in that Nokia just can not seem to come up with a plan. Symbian? It was/is a good OS but the UI has really lagged. MeeGo? Well where is it? Maybe it will really rock but they have not shipped a phone with it yet have they?
    Nokia needs a really good phone with a really

    • by geekoid ( 135745 )

      If only that had some planb document that discussed there plans and addressed those issues~

    • "All of Nokia's competitors in the smartphone space come from North America"

      Indeed, so that makes HTC, LG and Samsung you mention yourself North American companies?

      I think their owners will be very suprised. So that is how Taiwan (HTC) is going for independence from China, they are going to be the 51st state, oh wait that is canada. So that is how WW3 is going to start. Good to know.

      The rest of your post isn't much better.

      The iPhone cost way more then 200-300 AND didn't come with CDMA at the start. Nokia al

      • Nokia Meego, the phone for people who don't want to mess about with shady app sellers. Try the N900. Anyone who has KNOWS why it was such a good idea. It blows everything else out of the water.

        I have a N900 and I can definitely see the potential of MeeGo. Maemo is great, but it lacks that last bit of polish that takes something from being good to being the best. If Meego can improve the interface and allow even easier development across a wider set of devices, then I could see it becoming a dominant platform very quickly. iOS is limited by only being supplied by one vendor and Android can't take advantage of the existing Linux code base as easily or scale to a full desktop like MeeGo can.

        Actua

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:32PM (#35211912)

    Dear /.,

    We get it, you hate us. What else is new?

    - MSFT

  • by Stregano ( 1285764 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:36PM (#35211954)
    From TFA:

    Aggressively recruit young software talent from top universities. Nokia Recruiting to actively visit top universities worldwide to screen and and invite top students for interviews in Nokia R&D locations. Establish a credible and rewarding technical career progression path in Nokia (to avoid the best talent leaving the company or becoming management overhead). Offer internationally competitive salaries to new talent (if necessary, significantly above local market salaries). Establish Nokia as a company where the best and the brightest want to work.

    Yeah, keep dreaming kid. I tried to get a job at Google, Microsoft, and other big companies right out of the gate and that did not happen. Do you honestly think it will happen, ever? I wish the world worked that way, but it doesn't. As a big company, do you think they would rather hire some kid right out of the gate that has no experience in cell phone programming/Symbian, or a person that has been doing it for 5 years? Be realistic with some of this.

    This sounds like some college kids making a letter to say that they would want to do a takeover of the company (TFA

    If you elect us to a majority in the Nokia Board of Directors we will take the following concrete actions:

    ).

    I came to the college kids conclusion from the fact that anybody in the industry would not say that they would pull in college kids right out of the gate without experience. That is a huge risk.

    Seriously, what they want to do is take-over, fire everybody, stop all out sourcing, and bring in college kids. That sentence summarizes the article quite nicely. Unless they had some weight as share-holders, this is just something posted on /. that will either get laughed at or never see the light of day at anybody who has weight in Nokia.

    • Well at least they're trying to do something, rather than just shaking their head in disbelief and complaining on the internet. ;)

      Honestly, I agree with your assessment. They are idealistic, full of piss and vinegar, and their arguments/positions hold about as much weight as a Down feather. But I have to hand it to them, at least they are trying to rock the boat, rather than just accepting a sinking ship as lost.
    • As a big company, do you think they would rather hire some kid right out of the gate that has no experience in cell phone programming/Symbian, or a person that has been doing it for 5 years? Be realistic with some of this.

      From what I've seen, I'd put my bet on them going with the kid fresh out of school. Then they can work him 70-80 hrs/wk for $25-30k until his brain dribbles out of his eyeballs and then replace him with the next one.

      • by Nursie ( 632944 )

        Not so much in Finland, no. In europe people have rights.

      • That is assuming alot. For entry level, yes. For higher positions, it is too much of a risk to bring a college kid in. These kids are trying to push their way into being the Board of Directors. Do you know how much money a director at a major company makes? Once they get a taste of that cash, not much will change. Also, what managerial skills do these kids have, let alone upper management skills? Instead of pulling in a college kid, you can outsource for even cheaper. It is business. This will not
    • Well, plan A (Win7) has lost the shareholders 20% of value.

  • As I was saying in another topic earlier today, port Dalvik to MeeGo and you have access to all the Android apps at once!

  • by hellfire ( 86129 ) <deviladv AT gmail DOT com> on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @12:41PM (#35212040) Homepage

    ... how posting a Facebook page is "fighting back?"

    • by Ardaen ( 1099611 )
      It wasn't a facebook page earlier. I think their server overloaded due to slashdotting and so they forwarded it to a facebook page. Seems like a reasonable way to keep the message up even if the server can't handle the sudden load.
  • That's exactly what I would do. Microsoft would pay me off to go away, I would have the money, and get out of my Nokia stock before it tanks. Well played!

  • by Arkham ( 10779 )
    Their plan is idiotic. You may not like what Elop has proposed, but suggesting that Nokia just go stick their heads in the stand and work only out of Finland is idiotic. The Finnish culture at Nokia is largely what caused their downfall in the first place. The arrogance is unbelievable.
    • Re:Arrogant Finns (Score:4, Insightful)

      by duranaki ( 776224 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @01:10PM (#35212462)
      I don't agree at all. I worked for Nokia for 10 years and worked with many Finns. I think the groups point is not "Finland is so great" but rather Nokia's distributed R&D efforts are horribly inefficient. Having experienced it from the inside, I can see their point. And they do have a very large talented asset base in Finland, so it makes sense to keep that as a focal point. That said, they have absolutely no hope of getting "top talent" to go work in Finland.
    • What article are you reading? The one I'm reading says "Dramatically increase efficiency by eliminating outdated and bureaucratic R&D practices like geographically distributed software development and outsourcing [...] Transition to an R&D setup where 90% of all Nokia R&D takes place in only two geographical locations. One of them will be in Finland and the other will be defined later. There will be no more R&D projects with resources in multiple cities and different time zones. Only small t

    • by tsm_sf ( 545316 )
      Two of their points address this:

      - End of distributed R&D
      - End of R&D outsourcing

      I wouldn't call that "idiotic", I'd call that looking out for the long-term interests of the company. It's easy to point to the short-term monetary gains to be had from outsourcing or eliminating internal R&D, but for some reason the crashing failures of this approach (Carly Fiorina at HP, Boeing and the 787, etc etc) never seem to register with people.
  • Ever since I had the immense displeasure of getting to know your tactics in the mid 80ies it is clear to me that you are doing the same thing over and over again. Bad behavior: Pissing off engineers. This is not a good thing... never ever. 9 shareholders may not seem like much but if the majority of the engineers that are heavily invested would follow suite there will actually be a change for the better.

    Balmer et.al... I personally do not want your Windows or any other Microsoft offering on any of my phones

  • Their CEO is right (Score:5, Insightful)

    by eyrieowl ( 881195 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @01:33PM (#35212808)

    that they have a bad hand, and that they're playing a desperate game for the life of the company. Yes, they could do a bunch of other things...and none of them would be great for them. At this point, they do not have a winning hand. There is no winning move for them. The choice he made is a pragmatic one, to stay in the game. It doesn't mean it has to be their 50 year strategy, but it keeps them in the game for the next 3-5 years at least and that's crucial. They screwed up, and it's not the recent decision that was the big mistake. They missed the boat...arguing about why doesn't really change the basic fact that they missed the boat...and they are left in a precarious position. No, the MS way isn't going to get them to #1, or #2. But they can be #3. They can't run iOS...so they're cut off from apps on that platform. They can't be RIM...so they're cut off from that. They could do Android, and probably do it well...but he's right, that they would be subject to severe price pressure and that it would be brutally competitive, low margin. It would gut the company. Any of the other options, save MS, would consign them to the Nokia ghetto, with few apps, no significant community. Going with MS at this point is the only option which helps them to keep profit margins more than razor thin and also gets them access to a larger community, as well as a built in market, that they otherwise wouldn't have. IN THE MEANTIME...if they don't bust their butts on R&D and get out ahead of the next game changer, they will eventually fade away, but at least this buys them time to do that.

    Sometimes, the best move is just staying in the game, and they've done that. Yeah, I know, there's lots of risk, and lots of people would want anything but to be wedded to Microsoft, but...sorry guys, too little too late.

  • by jks ( 269 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2011 @02:05PM (#35213310) Homepage

    See also: http://www.nokiaplanc.com/ [nokiaplanc.com] , http://www.nokiapland.com/ [nokiapland.com] , etc (listed at http://www.nokiaplans.com/ [nokiaplans.com] ).

The most delightful day after the one on which you buy a cottage in the country is the one on which you resell it. -- J. Brecheux

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