财富中文网 >> 商业

诺基亚押宝拍照手机

分享: [译文]

诺基亚(Nokia)正加倍下注于智能手机十分古老的一项功能:摄像头

    At a press conference on Thursday, the struggling Finnish electronics giant unveiled its latest smart phone, the Nokia (NOK) Lumia 1020. Its marquee feature: a built-in camera that packs a 41-megapixel sensor. The device, which the company had been teasing ahead of the announcement, will come with Nokia's Pureview image processing software and six Carl Zeiss lenses. It'll be available in late-July for $299 with a contract.

    Nokia is trying to find ways to get consumers to give its devices a second look. A super high-end camera could differentiate its phones in a crowded market. According to a Pew Internet poll, 82% of American cell phone owners take pictures on their devices, up from 76% in 2010. Nokia's Pro Camera software will let shutterbugs tinker with their shots, including manual exposure settings and long exposure times. The camera app also includes a tutorial for novices. As far as photos are concerned, Nokia's phone could trump Samsung's wildly popular Galaxy S4, which packs a 16-megapixel shooter.

    One thing is for sure: Nokia needs a hit. The company has been losing ground in its bid to keep up with juggernauts Apple (AAPL) and Samsung, which uses Google's (GOOG) Android operating system. Nokia lost almost 5 percentage points of global market share in the first quarter, according to researcher Gartner. Globally, Samsung was No.1 with 23.6% market share, ahead of Nokia's 14.8% and Apple's 9%. A year earlier, Nokia had a 19.7% share.

    Nokia has largely made good on its promise to keep pumping out new devices. Last fall, Fortune took an inside look at the development process of the original Lumia. "Becoming cool again means having great products," Jo Harlow, the executive assigned with rebooting Nokia's smartphone business, told Fortune.

    Nokia's biggest ally in its turnaround is Microsoft (MSFT), which is providing the company with its Windows Phone OS. Nokia's exclusive relationship with Microsoft has allowed it to focus on making better devices. The tech giant, based in Redmond, Wash., is also paying Nokia quarterly "platform support" payments that started with $250 million in the fourth quarter of 2011. (Nokia's CEO Stephen Elop spent almost three years at Microsoft.)

阅读全文

相关阅读:

  1. Lumia能拯救诺基亚吗
  2. 诺基亚错在哪里?
  3. 诺基亚2013年不会消失
  4. 诺基亚启示录:企业巨头缘何应变乏力
返回顶部
#jsonld#