Nokia and Vodafone have announced a deal that will see the handset maker's mobile Internet services platform cropping up on Vodafone handsets.
The target for Nokia's 2007 business mobility strategy isn't the BlackBerry -- it's the millions of inboxes and corporate foot soldiers ignored by the push e-mail revolution.
Despite battling savage customer criticisms about the quality of its mobile phones, Nokia Australia's newly-appointed general manager Alex Lambeek believes the entire issue is a storm in a teacup. He recently spoke to ZDNet Australia.
Alan Nicklos's first task when he replaces Tyler McGee as managing director of Nokia Australia, early in February, will be dealing with the continuing phone-furore that has the NSW Department of Fair Trading investigating the company's activities.
The NSW Department of Fair Trading has refused to reveal the results of its investigations into claims that Nokia Australia has been knowingly selling mobile phones with inherent design faults.
Mobile phone companies have seen the green bandwagon go by and are flinging themselves on it faster than you can say "lazy, greenwash-spewing me-too merchants" but in the pantheon of would-be eco-friendly mobile makers, Nokia is coming up with some of the best and worst ideas on the market.
Keen news readers would have heard about the strong earthquake that rocked south-western Greece on Sunday. Fewer may have realised that the quake was not so much an act of God, as an act of Jobs.
What a week it's been for mobiles.
The iPhone isn't just the third leg of Apple's business ... it's now the single largest contributor to Apple's bottom line.
With the acquisition of Trolltech, Nokia has made its largest bet yet on changing the course of the industry.
Given the hype around anything with a single-letter prefix m-commerce, e-learning, iPhone last year's speculation over a Google "gPhone" sent the blogosphere into overdrive. The Android mobile phone platform that Google actually launched, however, took things in quite a different direction.
Symbian is the mobile world's dominant operating system, but can it walk the walk in the business world or will it always be the poor cousin to Windows Mobile in the enterprise? David Braue finds out.
Apple's iPhone hasn't even made it onto store shelves yet, but it already faces a growing number of rivals, from Cisco to Nokia and even Prada.
Everybody is different, and everyone's needs from a mobile phone differ markedly. Check out our Australian reviews of 10 distinctly different phones.
The Nokia 6510 is ready to go for m-commerce and GPRS, but still has problems with the screen.
It's a little slimmer and it has loads of storage, but Nokia's latest flagship model has little to justify its top-shelf price tag.
Mobile professionals who need a powerful but sleek messaging-centric smartphone will be well-served by the Nokia E71; just be prepared to pay a price.
The Nokia 6500 Slide is an attractive 3G phone, but despite features like video-out doesn't really offer anything enticing enough to buy one.
Yang's resignation: The talk of Silicon Valley
Silicon Valley is atwitter over what kind of CEO Yahoo needs to hire to replace the outgoing Jerry Yang.… Watch it now
In this exclusive video interview, Optus chief information officer Lawrie Turner speaks to ZDNet.com.au about being the IT head for Australia's number two telco.
NBN needs workers on board
D'Ascenzo: Read p23 of security review
Opening the floodgates on missing drives
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