Future Technologies
Adapting at speed
By James on 25 June 2008
ESPOO, Finland – Switching from a hardware manufacturer to one that doesn’t just “do” software and services, but leads the way with them, takes some doing. Rapid innovation, constant reinvention and a fearless quest for the future all sound good, but what’s the reality like?
Speaking to the South African Times, Bob Iannucci, Nokia’s chief technology officer, helps highlight how Nokia has the ideal philosophy, structure and working
environment to adapt at speed.
Bob says
But also key to the success of Nokia’s move to towards “services and software for mobility” is its considerable investment in research centres, especially in high profile Universities such a Cambridge in the UK, and the ability to act quickly on ideas. Bob continues,
Naturally, all this heavy investment in R&D is going someway towards, as Bob puts it, Nokia trying to ‘fuse the physical and digital worlds.’ This means getting your Nokia handset to interact intrinsically with your surroundings and not having to worry about compatibility issues. The emergence of NFC technology has shown this is already more than a far-flung reality but Nokia is always broaden it’s research net with Bob revealing the company is…
So as you can see Nokia is feverishly working behind the scenes to make our mobile life and handset interaction as seamless as possible but Bob Iannucci also made the prediction that the mobile communications model will follow that of the PC industry where standardisation is flourishing and incompatible hardware is going to be, in the main, a thing of the past.
Given yesterday’s announcement about Symbian, Bob’s words take on a whole new reality. What do you think?
Photo from laserstars
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Tags | investment, NFC, Nokia, R&D, services, Software, symbian, technology
























