China calling: Inside the work of the Nokia Research Centre in Beijing

One of Nokia’s top researchers in Beijing talks to Karen Bartlett about how innovations in China are influencing the next generation of mobile technology around the world.

Published by Karen Bartlett on February 15, 2012

Shanghai

GLOBAL - China has to be the largest, fastest growing, mobile market in the world – and perhaps the most challenging. “It’s quite different,” says Ying Liu, who leads a research team of seven looking at developing local UI and user experiences at the Nokia Research Centre (NRC) in Beijing.  “In China local users want to get local services. It’s really difficult to sell any kind of mobile phone without local applications.”

Ying joined Nokia 11 years ago, and completed a PhD on interactive technologies in Finland. Now she’s based at NRC Beijing in one of the city’s south eastern suburbs.

Ying Liu“To begin we look at user experiences, getting an understanding of user problems and design in the local areas – and then we propose technical solutions. If we have ideas specific to a location we probably develop relevant technology and produce a working prototype.”

In 2009 Ying worked on a prototype for a Chinese job hunting service.  

“China has huge numbers of migrant workers, perhaps as many as 225 million people, and a study we looked at from 2006 showed that they use mobile phones as the main way of communicating with families back in rural areas, and conducting their lives. They also face a lot of challenges, though; the cities are unfamiliar to them, and they haven’t got the necessary skills to get proper jobs.”

The team at the NRC conducted a successful pilot project to develop a job hunting and skills app.

“We learned a lot about technology and users from that project,” Ying says. “The pilot worked by increasing the relevance of job content to individuals. The recommendations algorithm we developed really worked, and we transferred that knowledge to other operating units. We also developed a recommendation engine that matched locally relevant content with user profiles.”

Equally important, Ying says, was the information the team collated about local users: “We understood how people would use a service, and how mobile internet technology would work in that scenario.

“For example we learned that there are important differences between age groups.

“Younger people are really good at using browsers, like the Nokia Browser. Older people like services that they can access through native applications, and tend to be more reluctant to open a browser.”

In China, Ying says, people expect to buy phones with local apps and content.

“People expect QQ, the local messaging and social network with more than 650 million users. That is considered essential. There are also a lot of customer-to-customer services – like Taobao.com, a sort of eBay where people buy anything and everything from other people. And microblogs are also a huge phenomena in China.”

China textHow people use and access their devices is also very different. “Text entry is totally different. A lot of people don’t know how to input text using a QWERTY keyboard so hand writing recognition where people use a stylus or their finger is really important.”

Ying’s team is currently working on new finger-based technology where people can write characters continuously on a touchscreen.  “It will be the most advanced handwriting recognition method on the market.”

Ying believes their research on text inputting and keyboards can also be applied to QWERTY keyboards to make inputting faster and better in English, and other languages, too.

New projects connected to social networking, and location services are also planned.

Nokia had “golden years,” in China Ying says, and still has a reputation for making durable, high quality products. The kind of in-depth work on user knowledge and innovation that’s being conducted at NRC Beijing will be crucial in making sure that Nokia continues to be competitive in one of the most demanding markets in the world: “We need more innovation, and more integration of that innovation into products.”

Comments

  • http://www.geekchoice.com Dagmar Schneitz

    It’s official. By 2030, we’ll all be speaking Chinese. 

  • http://conversations.nokia.com Ian Delaney

    They are certainly setting the pace, and that’s why I’m so pleased Nokia has invested in having a major NRC there.

  • Anonymous

    DRIVES ME NUTS that Nokia Symbian or WP still doesn’t have full multi-language support (INPUT & DISPLAY) for the major languages in use today.
    I can’t get a phone that’ll let me enter English today, Chinese and Japanese tomorrow, the fly to Europe and type out German, etc.
    Certainly, it’s not a memory space issue given 32MB microSD cards.

    For a modern business traveller, English + all major EU languages + Chinese/Japanese/Korean MUST be included on one phone (input keyboard + display fonts).

  • http://twitter.com/jeremyjustice Jeremy

    FYI: The picture you have up there is actually of Shanghai and looks a bit strange next to a headline about the Beijing site. 

  • http://conversations.nokia.com/ Heidi Lemmetyinen

    I haven’t used Symbian for a while so I’m not sure how it goes with those phones (perhaps our Symbian guru Adam can help?), but with my Lumia 800 Windows Phone I use English, Finnish & Swedish on a daily basis. Go to Settings > Keyboard, and then tick as many keyboard languages as you like. You can then switch between the languages on the keyboard view by pressing the key right next to the space bar. It’s dead easy!

  • http://conversations.nokia.com/ Heidi Lemmetyinen

    I haven’t used Symbian for a while so I’m not sure how it goes with those phones (perhaps our Symbian guru Adam can help?), but with my Lumia 800 Windows Phone I use English, Finnish & Swedish on a daily basis. Go to Settings > Keyboard, and then tick as many keyboard languages as you like. You can then switch between the languages on the keyboard view by pressing the key right next to the space bar. It’s dead easy!

  • Anonymous

    Thanks, yes we used it because we wanted to get across how dynamic the Chinese market is….

  • http://www.facebook.com/alvin.chin1 Alvin Chin

    Probably earlier than that. 

  • http://hothotblogs.info/5/ibms-mighty-morphin-touchscreen-keyboard-tailors-itself-to-your-hands/ IBM?s Mighty Morphin? Touchscreen Keyboard Tailors Itself to Your Handshothotblogs.info – 5 | hothotblogs.info – 5

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