Nokia is developing a tablet presumably running Windows 8, according to comments by company design chief Marko Ahtisaari.
Ahtisaari told the Finnish magazine Kauppalehti Optio that we are working on a tablet, according to Reuters. He also suggested he spends a third of his time on the unnamed device.
This isnt the first time similar rumors have emerged: A March 12 article in DigiTimes suggested that Nokia would launch a Windows 8 tablet sometime in the fourth quarter of 2012, complete with a 10-inch screen and a Qualcomm dual-core chipset. That information came from unnamed sources among upstream component suppliers, who predicted that Nokias venture into the tablet PC market will also further intensify competition among non-iPad tablet PC vendors.
Nokia and Microsoft already have a tight relationship centered on Windows Phone, which replaced Symbian and other homegrown platforms as the formers primary mobile operating system.
In addition, Nokia clearly recognizes the need to expand onto form factors beyond smartphones. In a form filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission March 8, the company suggested that adjacent products such as tablets could potentially threaten its attempts to gain market share in smartphones, since consumers and businesses increasingly bind themselves into multiple-device ecosystems from a single vendor.
If our competitors succeed in capturing markets where we are not currently present, this could erode our competitive position, read one section of the filing. For instance, we currently do not have tablets or other adjacent products in our mobile product portfolio, which may result in our inability to compete effectively in the tablet and developing multi-screen market segments in the future or forgoing those potential growth opportunities.
And on top of that, Nokias engineers have demonstrated a willingness to experiment with technology. Its recently unveiled PureView smartphone, for example, features a 41-megapixel camera sensor backed by new recording and image technology.
In 2012 so far, Nokia has concentrated its public efforts on establishing itself as the pre-eminent purveyor of Windows Phones, having introduced models at the high (the Lumia 900), medium (the Lumia 710) and low (Lumia 610) price points.
Meanwhile, Microsoft is ramping up Windows 8 for its final release sometime in late 2012. The upcoming operating system features a Start screen of colorful, touch-friendly tiles linked to applications, the better to operate on tablets.