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    Home Latest News
    • Mobile

    Nokia Offers New Tools for Devs, $42 Phone for the Next Billion

    Written by

    Michelle Maisto
    Published November 1, 2012
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      Nokia continues to pursue the next billion people to access the Internet, while also working to attract exasperated BlackBerry owners, first-time smartphone users and possibly swayable Android users. On Nov. 1, it introduced the Nokia 109 for developing markets—before subsidies or taxes the 109 will cost around $42—and announced two new programs for developers designing for a range of devices.

      The clamshell-style 109 features a 1.8-inch thin-film-transistor (TFT) display and runs Nokia’s Series 40 user interface, which is simple (and rather pretty) but won’t keep users off the Internet. The phone runs Nokia’s Xpress browser, which Nokia describes as “cloud-accelerated” to reduce the data consumption of Web pages by up to 90 percent. In addition to offering a better browsing experience, the crunching of data in the cloud, instead of on the phone, helps to keep data costs low.

      The 109 also offers access to Facebook and Twitter from its home screen, and an eBuddy Instant Messaging app is downloadable from the Nokia Store, which also includes hundreds of free games and other apps.

      There’s an FM radio and a built-in speaker that’s powerful enough to be heard throughout a room, and an SD card slot that can support up to 32GB of data. The battery, impressively, can last for 7.5 hours of talk time but 33 days of standby time.

      The Nokia 109 will be available this quarter in the Asia-Pacific region, China and Europe in choices of cyan and black.

      But, of course, Nokia hopes to court the full range of users, and its software development kit (SDK) for developers enables them to design for Windows Phone Series 40, Symbian and even Android and iOS. For its developers, on Oct. 30 Nokia introduced the Nokia Ad Exchange (NAX) and a Nokia Premium Developer Program (NPDP).

      NAX is a new, free way for developers to monetize their apps with in-app advertising and offers developers access to 120 advertising networks around the world.

      “The analytics provided through NAX is really, really powerful for developers. They can actually drill down to understand in which countries consumers are using their apps, what time of day they engage in the most usage,” Kenny Mathers, director programs and monetization at Nokia, said in a video on the Nokia site.

      With NAX delivering ads in more than 200 countries, Mathers said, “this is a tool that enables developers to run their own campaigns to drive awareness for their own applications within the exchange.”

      The Premium Developer Program runs $99 for an annual membership and is for those who would like some help creating high-end apps, says Nokia.

      The $99 fee gets a developer a one-year membership to the Microsoft Windows Phone Dev Center, which is essential for submitting apps to the Windows Phone Store; a license to Telerik Rad Controls for Windows Phone, which are said to shorten an app’s time to market and help an ad to rank higher in the Store; two Nokia tech-support tickets for reporting issues or asking questions; and “1 million API [application programming interface] calls per calendar month with Buddy’s cloud API offering,” which offers a cloud back end for Windows Phone Apps with APIs that deliver common app scenarios as a service.

      “There’s no better deal for a consumer than having an application that’s free, where a developer is still able to make money through advertising,” said Mathers. “It’s a really great solution.”

      On Oct. 29, Microsoft officially unveiled its Windows Phone 8 operating system, freeing up AT&T to ready sales of the Nokia Lumia 920 and 820 and Verizon Wireless the Lumia 822.

      Michelle Maisto
      Michelle Maisto
      Michelle Maisto has been covering the enterprise mobility space for a decade, beginning with Knowledge Management, Field Force Automation and eCRM, and most recently as the editor-in-chief of Mobile Enterprise magazine. She earned an MFA in nonfiction writing from Columbia University.

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