China says Ni Hao to the Nokia Lumia

Key smartphone launches in world's biggest market

Published by Karen Bartlett on March 28, 2012

Nokia 800CNokia 800C Cyan

 BEIJING, China – It’s arrived. The world’s largest and fastest-growing mobile market now has a truly great smartphone. The Nokia Lumia has launched with China Telecom in a ceremony held at the Yongdingmen Gate – the oldest, and most important, entrance to the city of Beijing. 

Nokia has a long tradition of providing Chinese users with all of the local functions and services they need, and the Nokia 800C has been tailored with exclusive apps and services for the Chinese market.  

Announcing the launch, Nokia CEO Stephen Elop said:

“We’re excited to introduce our first Lumia smartphone, the Nokia 800C, to this important market with our exclusive launch partner, China Telecom. Working closely together, we’ve created a compelling, locally relevant experience on the Nokia 800C especially tailored for people in China”.  

The Nokia 800C is the first CDMA Windows Phone in China, featuring Windows Phone 7.5, and operated on the country’s most extensive and reliable 3G network.

Nokia offers Lumia users in China access to major Internet services including Sina, SOHU, Tencent and Renren.  

Wang Xiaochu, Chairman of China Telecom, said the launch represented “Optimism and excitement for the future of Windows Phone and Nokia Lumia in China.”

China Telecom’s mobile market in China is bigger than Verizon in the U.S. – and, according to research by Strategy Analytics, over 32 million smartphones were sold in China in the last quarter. We estimate that’s a massive rate of four smartphones per second.

This promises to be only the start of the Nokia Lumia experience in China, with the launch later in Q2 of the Nokia 610C, aimed at younger users.

Global phone, local experience

A global phone with a uniquely local experience:

The Nokia 800C has the same head-turning design, eye catching Windows Phone user interface – and great Nokia services that has made the Lumia the must-have smartphone of 2012.     

Nokia experiences, including Nokia Drive, Nokia Maps, and Nokia Music have been optimized for Windows Phone – and are only available on the Nokia Lumia: 

  • Nokia Maps, provides easy-access, three-dimensional maps of China, and over 190 countries, as well as local content from Fantong, Jiepang, Ctrip, Qunar and Soufun.
  • Nokia Drive, brings free, voice-guided, turn-by-turn navigation to China, and also comes with offline navigation.
  • Nokia Music brings a single music hub with unlimited free music for 12 months in mainland China.  It also includes MixRadio, a free, global, mobile music-streaming application that delivers hundreds of channels of local and international music.

The Nokia 800C also has exclusive applications and services, just for China:

With the Nokia Lumia in China you can download more than 20,000 apps from the Marketplace – and get integrated music, games, cartoon, video and reading apps right on the Nokia Lumia 800C home screen.

Music and messaging

As from today in the Marketplace, Nokia Lumia smartphones in China will also have access to magazine applications  from Trends,which will launch Cosmopolitan first for Nokia Lumia smartphones and provide Nokia Lumia consumers free access to FHM, Harper’s Bazaar and Esquire.

For  people using a Nokia Lumia smartphone in China, Nokia will soon offer 100,000 free downloads of the hit gaming titles Fruit Ninja and PVZ through the Nokia Collection in Marketplace.

launch event

Every journey starts with a single step: 

Nokia and Microsoft also announced the ‘Be Top’ program, which is designed to encourage and support developers in creating great new applications on Windows Phone specifically for people in China.

The Nokia 800C is about more than a smartphone, it’s about building an exciting new ecosystem in China – and today was the first step in that journey.

The Nokia 800C will be available in China in black and cyan in early April.

Here’s how our colleagues on the Windows Phone blog reported the story.

Comments

  • Anonymous

    So as a consumer, If I want to access some of the english language apps for when I travel to lets say Hong Kong or US, I cannot? I have only 20K apps to satify my needs and I am not eligible or have no right to other apps free or paid which are published in other markets.

    Tailoring marketplace for local needs is one thing, but that doesn’t mean you have to deny an opportunity for people to get other applications.

    • Karen Bartlett

      You can still get English apps, we’re just stressing that there are lots of locally relevant apps available as well 

    • Karen Bartlett

      You can still get English apps, we’re just stressing that there are lots of locally relevant apps available as well 

    • Prasenjit Bist

       as locally relevant u have 20000 apps other than that the whole market place except for legal bindings if any is at ur service…

  • Anonymous

    So as a consumer, If I want to access some of the english language apps for when I travel to lets say Hong Kong or US, I cannot? I have only 20K apps to satify my needs and I am not eligible or have no right to other apps free or paid which are published in other markets.

    Tailoring marketplace for local needs is one thing, but that doesn’t mean you have to deny an opportunity for people to get other applications.

  • Anonymous

    So as a consumer, If I want to access some of the english language apps for when I travel to lets say Hong Kong or US, I cannot? I have only 20K apps to satify my needs and I am not eligible or have no right to other apps free or paid which are published in other markets.

    Tailoring marketplace for local needs is one thing, but that doesn’t mean you have to deny an opportunity for people to get other applications.

  • Anonymous

    So as a consumer, If I want to access some of the english language apps for when I travel to lets say Hong Kong or US, I cannot? I have only 20K apps to satify my needs and I am not eligible or have no right to other apps free or paid which are published in other markets.

    Tailoring marketplace for local needs is one thing, but that doesn’t mean you have to deny an opportunity for people to get other applications.

  • http://twitter.com/signorhaddock PrasenjitBist

    congrats one more market wow come on folks tym to celebrate … hurray thanks mr. elop u have really increased nokia’s clock speed cdma lumia mind blowing….

  • Anonymous

    When these phones will be available for GSM networks like China Mobile and china unicom, because these are the largest carriers in china.

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

      We are planning to sell Lumia devices through several carriers in China eventually, but right now I haven’t got any more details.

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

      We are planning to sell Lumia devices through several carriers in China eventually, but right now I haven’t got any more details.

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

      We are planning to sell Lumia devices through several carriers in China eventually, but right now I haven’t got any more details.

  • Anonymous

    many young chinese people have been brainwashed by apple iphone, good luck to nokia

  • Anonymous

    many young chinese people have been brainwashed by apple iphone, good luck to nokia

  • http://withwindows.com Ricky Shah

    I wish we get CDMA handset in India too. This is really a good move on part of Nokia and Microsoft. China will definitely boost their sales figure

  • Anonymous

    Wow. I saw this launch on BBC World TV. Great move for Nokia

  • Anonymous

    Wow. I saw this launch on BBC World TV. Great move for Nokia

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_4C6HTA2K5ARCWZXCMTGODHSOQQ Jura

    there are some rumors that Nokia going to continue with MeeGo and release 2 new smartphones based on this platform. Any comments and probably some article about this? 

    • Anonymous

      If it is one with PureView inside, with a dualcore cpu and a hi resolution 4″ screen I need to search my old tent. Just in case I need to do some camping in front of a Nokia store to get it just in time on the release date.

      If a Terminal is preinstalled and has a querty keyboard just like the N900 I would sell my mother in law for it! :-D

      Anyone willing to organize a release party? ;-)

      My Boss has sold his Lumia after I showed him my N9.

    • Anonymous

      If it is one with PureView inside, with a dualcore cpu and a hi resolution 4″ screen I need to search my old tent. Just in case I need to do some camping in front of a Nokia store to get it just in time on the release date.

      If a Terminal is preinstalled and has a querty keyboard just like the N900 I would sell my mother in law for it! :-D

      Anyone willing to organize a release party? ;-)

      My Boss has sold his Lumia after I showed him my N9.

  • Anonymous

    why they put a C after 800? C means crap in Southern China. don’t people research before they name any device. 800 is definitely good number for the Chinese people. if you name it 888 instead of 800C, it will sell like hotcakes!

    • http://tieba.baidu.com/f?kw=%C5%B5%BC%C7 aikon171

       C means CDMA

      • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_O32YCIHIJA2OOX7QYMSYBYEROM Jonny

         doesnt matter lol, some people believe in that stuff

  • http://twitter.com/GodernNg godern ng

    加油~~

  • http://twitter.com/GodernNg godern ng

    加油~~

  • http://twitter.com/GodernNg godern ng

    加油~~

  • Anonymous

    On Mar 28, Beijing, China Telecom said Lumia 800C will be available on Mar 31. But I have contacted China Telecom 4 times already in the past 3 days. They do not even know what Lumia 800 is! Instead, they told me that “We don’t sell Nokia phones”. I tried Google and found another person in another province complaining similar issue. We do not event see ads of Lumia 800 in their stores (lots of iphone ads though). Maybe that’s because “Lumia 800c will be exclusive for China Telecom for a full month”. They think they have a full month to waste. I think maybe Nokia has chosen a wrong partner.

  • Anonymous

    On Mar 28, Beijing, China Telecom said Lumia 800C will be available on Mar 31. But I have contacted China Telecom 4 times already in the past 3 days. They do not even know what Lumia 800 is! Instead, they told me that “We don’t sell Nokia phones”. I tried Google and found another person in another province complaining similar issue. We do not event see ads of Lumia 800 in their stores (lots of iphone ads though). Maybe that’s because “Lumia 800c will be exclusive for China Telecom for a full month”. They think they have a full month to waste. I think maybe Nokia has chosen a wrong partner.

  • Anonymous

    On Mar 28, Beijing, China Telecom said Lumia 800C will be available on Mar 31. But I have contacted China Telecom 4 times already in the past 3 days. They do not even know what Lumia 800 is! Instead, they told me that “We don’t sell Nokia phones”. I tried Google and found another person in another province complaining similar issue. We do not event see ads of Lumia 800 in their stores (lots of iphone ads though). Maybe that’s because “Lumia 800c will be exclusive for China Telecom for a full month”. They think they have a full month to waste. I think maybe Nokia has chosen a wrong partner.

  • Anonymous

    I prefer still the Nokia N9. The Lumia 800 at least are expensive crap. No USB, no TV out, no multitasking, no ota updates, unable to receive stuff via BT. Well done Nokia, the worst device since the N97.

    • tarun gulati

      the lumia 800 in multitasking is avelable so plz check yr again.. ok kadusch

      • Anonymous

        It’s actually not true multi-tasking, the correct term IIRC is “freeze drying”.
        I can’t recall the techinical detail of how it works OTTOMH.
        But I do know that it’s not multi-tasking in the truest sense.
        And the most apps it allows to be running at once is 5.
        Any more and it will start to close apps down…
        That no. is being increased slightly with Tango IIRC.

      • Anonymous

        It’s actually not true multi-tasking, the correct term IIRC is “freeze drying”.
        I can’t recall the techinical detail of how it works OTTOMH.
        But I do know that it’s not multi-tasking in the truest sense.
        And the most apps it allows to be running at once is 5.
        Any more and it will start to close apps down…
        That no. is being increased slightly with Tango IIRC.

      • Anonymous

        I have a Lumia 800 at home. The applications are freezing. All you see is a screenshot of the frozen application. If you “switch back” it continues. Some applications have to restart and others have to reconnect because the internet connection was also closed. So uploading a picture to flicker while reading your mails is impossible!

        Thats not multitasking, they seems to think: “The dumb customer wouldn’t recognize… perhaps after purchasing. So no need to change the situation.”

        The Multitasking of Windows 3.1 worked far better!

        • Prasenjit Bist

           omg is that a scam kadsuch just bcoz u like sm linux crap

          • Anonymous

            You’re so weird…..
            In the past you’ve talked about how you like some Linux-based stuff.
            And now this… WTF are you smoking.
            WTF are you necro-posting anyway.

  • Anonymous

    I prefer still the Nokia N9. The Lumia 800 at least are expensive crap. No USB, no TV out, no multitasking, no ota updates, unable to receive stuff via BT. Well done Nokia, the worst device since the N97.

  • http://www.reviewsexpert.net/ Reviews Expert

    whats the difference between lumia 800 and 800c?

    • Prasenjit Bist

       c stands for CDMA version

      • http://www.reviewsexpert.net/ Reviews Expert

        thanks bist

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