The Jerusalem Post

New Nokia 8 phone targets demand for video-streaming

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HELSINKI (Reuters) – HMD Global, the Finnish start-up looking to reinvigora­te the Nokia phone brand, unveiled the Nokia 8 last week, hoping to cash in on rising consumer demand for high-quality audio and video features.

The Android device, due out in September, will potentiall­y beat rivals on price but will still face fierce competitio­n, with Apple’s highly anticipate­d 10th-anniversar­y iPhone also expected next month and Samsung’s Galaxy Note 8 set to hit the market this week.

With a suggested price tag of around €599 ($703), the Nokia 8 undercuts Apple, which typically offers a stripped-down version of its latest phones for a similar price but charges hundreds of euros more for memory and key features.

The new top-of-the-line Nokia sports a dualsight video feature that enables simultaneo­us live-streaming on social-media networks from both front and rear cameras on a split screen. It has licensed lens technology from camera maker Zeiss.

It is the most high-end phone so far from HMD, which was set up late last year and made a splash in May when it revived Nokia’s classic 3310 feature handset in new brightly colored versions.

Other features of the Nokia 8, which will also compete with Huawei’s recently launched P10, include surround-sound audio technology made for Nokia’s own virtual-reality camera OZO for Hollywood profession­als.

“This is especially meant for millennial creators, people who want to share what’s happening every day,” HMD chief marketing officer Pekka Rantala said.

HMD products are built by a unit of Foxconn, which acquired the manufactur­ing and distributi­on assets of the former Nokia phone business from Microsoft last year.

Once the world’s dominant phone maker, Nokia Oyj sold its handset operations to Microsoft in 2014, leaving it to focus on telecoms network equipment.

HMD is owned by Smart Connect LP, a private-equity fund managed by Jean-Francois Baril, a long-serving former senior vice president of Nokia. It took over the Nokia feature-phones business in December and has a licensing deal giving it sole use of the Nokia brand on all phones and tablets.

It has so far launched four smartphone­s and five feature phones, including the 3310.

HMD will pay Nokia royalties for the brand and patents.

 ?? (HMD Global/handout via Reuters) ?? NEW NOKIA 8 phones are seen in this HMD Global handout picture obtained by Reuters last week.
(HMD Global/handout via Reuters) NEW NOKIA 8 phones are seen in this HMD Global handout picture obtained by Reuters last week.

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