|
Surprise new entrant to the market
Nokia is "looking
very actively" at getting into the laptop market, according to the
firm's chief executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo.
The
world's biggest mobile phone manufacturer is looking to exploit the
increasing convergence of the mobile and PC industry, Kallasvuo
explained in an interview with Finnish television station YLE.
"We
do not have to look even for five years from now to see that what we
know as a mobile phone and what we know as a PC are in many ways
converging," he said.
"Today we have hundreds of millions of
people who are having their first internet experience on the phone.
This is a good indication."
Kallasvuo did not specify whether the
company would produce a full-featured laptop or a slimmed down netbook.
Nokia already produces a Wi-Fi internet tablet, the 770, and the new
devices could be based on this reference design.
The line between
computers and telephony is becoming increasingly blurred. Acer
announced at Mobile World Congress earlier this month that it is
entering the smartphone market with a host of new Tempo models, while
Dell is rumoured to be producing a smartphone aimed at the lucrative
business end of the market.
|