The Nokia N9 (codename Lankku) is a smartphone made by Nokia running on the Linux-based MeeGo "Harmattan" mobile operating system. First released in September 2011, it was the first and only device from Nokia with MeeGo. It was released in three colors: black, cyan and magenta, before Nokia announced on Nokia World 2011 the white version of the phone.
The successor of Nokia N900, internally known as N9-00, was scheduled to be released in late 2010, approximately one year after N900 launched. Pictures of the prototype leaked in August 2010 showed an industrial design and a 4-row keyboard. A software engineer working for Nokia's device division cited the N9-00 (the product number) in the public bug tracker for Qt, an open source application development framework used in MeeGo. This design was dropped; then Nokia started working on the N9-01, codenamed Lankku, a new variant without a keyboard.
Nokia N9 was announced on 21 June 2011 at the Nokia Connection event in Singapore. At the time, the phone was presumed to become available to the public in September 2011. Users can get notified via e-mail of the availability of N9 in their country at the webpage of the Nokia Online Store. Since Nokia closed its Nokia Online Shop in many countries, including Poland, Germany, Netherlands, France, Italy, Spain, United Kingdom, and the United States on 30 June 2011, availability in those countries will be in the hands of retailers and operators.
Nokia Corporation (Finnish: Nokia Oyj, Finnish pronunciation: [ˈnokiɑ], UK /ˈnɒkiə/, US /ˈnoʊkiə/) is a Finnish multinational communications and information technology company, founded in 1865. Nokia is headquartered in Espoo, Uusimaa, in the greater Helsinki metropolitan area. In 2014, Nokia employed 61,656 people across 120 countries, conducts sales in more than 150 countries and reported annual revenues of around €12.73 billion. Nokia is a public limited-liability company listed on the Helsinki Stock Exchange and New York Stock Exchange. It is the world's 274th-largest company measured by 2013 revenues according to the Fortune Global 500. The company is a component of the Euro Stoxx 50 stock market index.
The company currently focuses on large-scale telecommunications infrastructures, and technology development and licensing. Nokia is also a major contributor to the mobile telephony industry, having assisted in development of the GSM and LTE standards, and was, for a period, the largest vendor of mobile phones in the world. Nokia's dominance also extended into the smartphone industry through its Symbian platform, but it was soon overshadowed by the growing dominance of Apple's iPhone line and Android devices. Nokia eventually entered into a pact with Microsoft in 2011 to exclusively use its Windows Phone platform on future smartphones.
Nokia 800 may refer to:
Nokia 130 and Nokia 130 Dual Sim are entry-level mobile phones from Microsoft branded as Nokia. The 130 supports one Mini-SIM card and 130 Dual Sim supports two Mini-SIM cards. The cost will be equivalent of 19 Euros when bought unlocked and SIM-free its available colors are red, black, and white depending on region and market.
The phones are targeted at emerging markets, and initially went on sale in China, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines, and Vietnam.
Nokia 130 runs on an updated Series 30+ UI. The phone comes pre-loaded with various apps, games, and audio/video playback support. The audio player supports MP3, WAV, AAC files. The video player supports MP4 (H.263) files.
The Nokia 130 and 130 Dual both provide the user with very long use times:
He is the sovereign
Knows everyone's heart
Has known it from the very start
Create the stage with guilt and regret
The diagnosis unheeded
There lies a cure that concedes to sickness
Healing for those who desire it
Today is the day
Acknowledge and stay
Wear the sackcloth and scatter the ashes
Like a scholar in the dark accuses
God in the dock will see through all excuses
The ancient man came forth and touched
The robe with great respect and feared
Steer them right
Lead them onward and over the shrine
Son of Leah, you are not alone
Breathe, sarcophagus
A cry of a vulture, a cry of a man