Nokia preparing for August withdrawal from Japanese phone market
It has been reported that Nokia is laying the ground for pulling
out of the Japanese market over the next few months. Nokia is preparing
to put the shutters down on the brand retail stores that it owns by the
close of July.
Earlier reports say that Nokia's luxury brand phones, Vertu had
been under pressure to push sales in the stores that sold this brand in
the wake of the smartphones increasingly gaining in popularity. The
Vertu branded concierge service is expected to be closed down in
August.
In retrospect, Nokia had stopped the sale of handsets via the
networks in November 2008. Its market share had fallen below one
percent. Softbank and Docomo used to sell Nokia handsets. However, the
local operators are known to prefer defining their handset
specifications in-house and then contracting handset vendors to
manufacture phones for them.Ren Ng developed the technology while
working on his PhD at Stanford. The breakthrough, he said, is the wireless Gum Camera
is able to capture more light than others.But because Lytro is still in
stealth mode, it put the camera in a protective case, so Hernandez
hasn't actually seen it.The event takes after popular sports activities
while encouraging Malaysians to bring their old, redundant or even
broken mobiles, using them as sports equipment for a game of
basketball, javelin, or bowling ball.
It presents recycling as a fun way to educate Malaysians on the
benefits of conserving the environment.Nokia, began its recycling
efforts in year 2000 across South-East Asia Pacific, promoting
recycling of mobile phones, batteries and its accessories to consumer
through its Public Take Back programmes.At present, Nokia has more than
200 Nokia Care Centres with recycling bins in Australia, Bangladesh,
Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand
and Vietnam.
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