Bangkok Post

Iconic Nokia 3310 makes a comeback

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BARCELONA: Finnish brand Nokia, a former mobile star, on Sunday launched three new Android smartphone­s and unveiled a revamped version of its iconic 3310 model more than a decade after it was phased out.

Unlike the original, which was known for its sturdiness, the new Nokia 3310, will allow web browsing.

“The new version will bring back its predecesso­r’s popular ‘Snake’ game and distinctiv­e ringtones,’’ said Arto Nummela, chief executive of Finnish start-up HMD Global Oy which will produce the phone under a licensing agreement with Nokia Oyj.

“The telephone will allow you to talk for 22 hours, ten times more than the original,” he said during a presentati­on in Barcelona on the eve of the start of the Mobile World Congress, the world’s biggest mobile phone show.

Launched in 2000, Nokia’s original 3310 sold nearly 120 million units worldwide before it was discontinu­ed in 2005, making it one of the world’s best-selling mobile phones.

Analysts said resurrecti­ng the popular model was a clever way for HMD Global to relaunch Nokia’s brand.

“HMD launched three new smartphone­s and an iconic mobile. It is a way to create a halo effect around the other models by reviving talk about the Nokia brand,” said Thomas Husson, a mobile analyst at Forrester.

In addition to the new 3310, HMD presented three new smartphone­s, the Nokia 3, Nokia 5 and Nokia 6 which will sell for different prices.

The Nokia 6 was already available in China and will now go on sale globally.

“We think (Nokia) could take 5% of the global smartphone market by the end of 2019. But it needs to get big quick or it won’t work,” said CCS Insight’s device specialist and chief of research, Ben Wood.

Nokia was the world’s top mobile maker between 1998 and 2011 but was overtaken by South Korean rival Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd after failing to respond to the rapid rise of smartphone­s.

Its telephone brand remains widely recognised, especially in developing markets.

Now a leading telecom equipment maker, Nokia sold its entire handset business to Microsoft Corp in 2014.

Last year HMD bought Microsoft Mobile’s handset business and the right to

use the Nokia brand.

Under the agreement, Nokia will receive royalty payments from HMD for sales of every Nokia branded mobile phone or tablet.

 ??  ?? Arto Nummela, CEO of HMD Global Oy, holds up Nokia 3310 device during a presentati­on ceremony at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona on Sunday.
Arto Nummela, CEO of HMD Global Oy, holds up Nokia 3310 device during a presentati­on ceremony at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona on Sunday.

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