Nokia top model N900 sales below 100,000: Gartner
LONDON |
LONDON (Reuters) - Nokia sold less than 100,000 top-of-the-range N900 smartphones in its first five months on the market, researcher Gartner said, indicating it has yet to mount a serious challenge to the iPhone and Blackberry.
The chunky computer-like handset -- with slide-out keyboard and a touch screen -- has found support among hard-core technology specialists but failed to attract a wider audience.
A spokesman for Nokia, the world's top cellphone maker, declined to comment on the sales number, saying the company was pleased with sales, but an executive was more bullish.
"Sales have substantially exceeded expectations," Alberto Torres, head of Nokia's solutions business, told the Open Mobile Summit trade conference in London this week.
Nokia has been unable to mount a serious challenge to Apple three years after the iPhone's launch. Its last hit smartphone model, the N95, was unveiled in 2006.
The sales of less than 100,000 N900s compares with sales of 8.75 million iPhones in January-March alone.
The N900, which went on sale last November, is Nokia's first phone running the Linux Maemo operating system, which analysts see as a key for Nokia to regain ground in the coming years.
In February this year Nokia unveiled a plan to merge Maemo with Intel's Moblin operating system.
Nokia sold 50,000 N900s in the last quarter of 2009, and quarterly sales fell in January-March, Gartner statistics showed. Gartner does not track phone sales per model, but as the N900 is the only phone using Maemo, the statistics for operating systems show sales for the model.
(Editing by David Cowell)
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N900 is a mobile computer not targeted to mass market, the intention of Nokia is made a N900 as a test to evolve to the next MeeGo phone.
Is unfair to compare with iPhone… they are not in the same market. Why don’t you say that Nokia in the same paeriod sells 21 milion phones, and compare with iPhone, is not a valid comparision, likes yours.
By the way, Nokia has a lot of problems to supply N900 during fall of 2009 because and unexpected demand…
But is a fail for you… Go to that direction that finally everybody will see what kind of news you do.
Could you inform better please!!
http://www.engadget.com/2010/05/28/nokia-sells-just-100-000-n900s-after-first-five-months-so
Carolina… but that burger away and fix your report..!!



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