Archive for July 19th, 2008

While some handset manufacturers seem to be defying the global economic turndown and continuing to push ahead in mobile phone sales, other mobile phone manufacturers are struggling to keep pace. Sony Ericsson's fortunes are apparently much more bleak than Nokia's. In their most current financial statement, Sony Ericsson posted huge 2Q 2008 profit declines compared to the same period last year.

The Japanese-Swedish mobile phone manufacturer noted that net profit for the second quarter amounted to a mere $6 million - a 97% dprofit lossownslide from 2Q 2007 net profits of $220 million. Sony Ericsson blamed the competitive market, higher handset development costs, and economic fluctuations as reasons for their massive profit decline.

To help ease the profit-choke, Sony Ericsson has announced that it will be cutting some 2,000 jobs within the next 12 months. The move is expected to save the company $470 million.

“Challenging market conditions are expected to prevail for Sony Ericsson for at least the rest of 2008,” the company said, “in particular for the third quarter.”

Sony Ericsson recently posted a teaser site to promote its upcoming Walkman phones. The move toward viral marketing of their next-generation handsets could be a sign that Sony Ericsson has realized its marketing weaknesses and is changing up its gameplan to appeal to the more savvy mobile phone consumer.

Keep reading for the full press release.

STOCKHOLM, Sweden - Mobile phone maker Sony Ericsson on Friday posted a 97 percent drop in second-quarter earnings and said it would slash 2,000 jobs worldwide in a move to cut costs.

The LM Ericsson and Sony Corp. joint venture blamed the earnings decline on tougher market conditions, higher development costs and negative effects from exchange rate fluctuations.

Company spokeswoman Lisa Canning in London stated the company would cut 2,000 jobs “within the next 12 months” as part of an effort to reduce operational costs by 300 million euros ($470 million) per year.

In a statement, Sony Ericsson President Hideki Komiyama stated his company estimates restructuring charges to “be of the same magnitude as our reduction in operating expenses.”

Net profit in the quarter fell to 6 million euros ($9.5 million), down sharply from 220 million euros in the same period a year ago.

Sales were down about 9 percent to 2.8 billion ($4.4 million), from 3.1 million euros in the second quarter in 2007.

The company had warned already last month that it expected to just break even before taxes in the quarter because of tougher competition and a continued slowing market growth in its mid- to high-end phones.

It was the second profit warning this year from Sony Ericsson, which usually ranks fourth or fifth among the world's biggest mobile phone makers.

“Challenging market conditions are expected to prevail for Sony Ericsson for at least the rest of 2008,” the company stated, “in particular for the third quarter.”

Sony Ericsson's results were in stark contrast to the better-than-expected earnings report by market leader Nokia Corp. on Thursday. Nokia, which makes four of 10 handsets sold worldwide, stated it expected the global market for cell phones to grow by 10 percent or more in 2008, upgrading an earlier estimate.

Sony Ericsson forecast the global market to grow at around 10 percent but with a continued decline in average selling prices.

The average selling price for Sony Ericsson handsets fell in the second quarter to 116 euros ($185), from 125 euros, because of a wider range of cheaper phones in its product portfolio and price competition on more expensive phones.

The company said its gross margin dropped to 23.1 percent, from 29.6 percent in the second quarter of 2007, while research and development costs jumped by 22 percent to 344 million euros ($545 million).

Shipped units reached 24.4 million in the quarter, Sony Ericsson said.


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Nokia logoThere's no doubt that Nokia is the largest mobile phone manufacturer in the world. Even in the face of an uncertain financial sector and declining global handset demand, Nokia has managed to increase their net profits in Q2 2008 compared to the year-ago period.

With €1.474 billion in second quarter net profits, compared to €1.393 billion net profit in the same period last year, Nokia has seen its profitable cash flow grow almost 6%. Net sales of handsets were up 4% and market share increased to 40%, globally. Nokia's market share for Q2 2007 was 38%, and came in at a solid 39% in Q1 2008.

And, to keep the good times rolling, Nokia has announced that it has revised its previous prediction of 10% global mobile phone market growth. The Finnish handset maker now believes that they'll see 10% “or more” in global handset growth throughout 2008.

[Via: MobileBurn]


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Palm Treo 800w homescreenWith Sprint having recently gone live with their Palm Treo 800w, Palm fans have been flocking to the new Treo flagship and putting it through its paces. The Palm Treo 800w features 3G EVDO Rev. A data connectivity, that trick WiFi toggle switch, and the new 320

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fring goes JavaME, Maemo Linux!

fring folks have been busy these days, I can tell. They've announced the new minifring app for JavaME-enabled phones which don't support VoIP. That means the users of Nokia, Sony Ericsson and/or some other feature phones will be able to manage their IM presence, and chat with their buddies on multiple IM networks. Best of all, minifring will support fringAdd-ons!

In a related news, fring has made its app available for Nokia World wide web Tablets. Users of Nokia N800 and N810 (I'm not sure will it work on the Nokia 770) can now make World wide web calls and chat with their buddies while on the go.

What can I state - way to go fring!

The short video introducing the two new platforms follows after the jump.


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The Amiga is a family of computers originally developed by Amiga Corporation. Development on the Amiga began in 1982 with Jay Miner as the principal hardware designer. Commodore International bought Amiga Corporation and introduced the machine to the market in 1985. The name Amiga was chosen by the developers specifically from the Spanish and Portuguese word for a female friend,…



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LG KS360 messaging phone

LG's full QWERTY keyboard equipped messaging phone, KS360, will be hitting Europe this week. We're still not sure which markets nor how much it will cost, but we do have all the specs. Let's briefly go through them, shall we:

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Beijing OlympicsSure, Verizon might already have the established mobile TV business, but I'm still not sure just how many users go beyond their VCAST Video offering. Maybe I'm wrong, but AT&T which has recently launched its mobile Television offering has scored a massive deal to push the service forward. It's the exclusive Beijing Olympics coverage that will see them picking up the content through NBC Olympics 2Go.

Meanwhile, Verizon's offering will be limited to streaming video that’ll include daily highlights, breaking news, scores and results, and more.

Now, it's just a matter of finding enough LG Vu and Samsung Access owners interested for some real-time action…

[Via: mocoNews, Engadget]


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Zumobi goes BlackBerryZumobi has announced that its widget platform is available for the BlackBerry platform. Now BlackBerry users will be able to take their favorite content with themselves, wherever they happen to be.

With an already robust library of widgets (Zumobi calls them “Tiles”) to entice users of Windows Mobile and BlackBerry with news, sports, weather, entertainment, games and more, Zumobi now offers even more new Tiles for users including NPR, AP Olympics report, Major League Baseball as well as social media sites Facebook and Twitter. Users can also create their own Zumobi mobile widgets from just about any Web content with the new Tile Creation Wizard now available on Zumobi's website.

Convinced? You better be - I'm not aware some better widget solution is available for the BlackBerry platform. Hop over to www.zumobi.com or get.zumobi.com from you mobile web browser to download Zumobi and start expanding your addiction. ;)


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Verizon Wireless HopeLineVerizon has released the latest HopeLine numbers and they’re quite impressive. Starting from 2001 when the program started, the mobile operator has collected more than 5 million phones. Of that number, one million has been collected during the last nine months.

At the same time, HopeLine has provided an equivalent of 180 million minutes of service and cash allows totaling more than $5 million to local shelters and non-profit organizations.

Verizon Wireless' HopeLine is a national phone recycling and reuse program that helps victims of domestic violence. More information about HopeLine is available from here.


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ThrrumA month ago, we posted that Thrrum MMS Search has been made available for Sprint and AT&T subscribers. Now the mobile visual search provider is bringing its neat service to the users of T-Mobile and Verizon Wireless.

From the official release:

Thrrum MMS Search enables camera phone users to find and browse information related to their physical environment using the MMS service integrated into their phones. Users can capture a picture of any text with their auto-focus or macro mode equipped camera phone and send the picture as a MMS to m@thrrum.com. Relevant search results are then sent to the users' phones. The Thrrum MMS Search service is presently in beta and is available free of charge to T-Mobile and Verizon wireless subscribers in the United Says.

As 23half's (the company behind Thrrum) CEO, K. Gopalakrishnan, said: “With Thrrum, any text that you see around you becomes a hyperlink that can be 'clicked' upon with your camera phone.” Sounds cool to me. ;)


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