Nokia to enter PC market with new netbook

The world's top mobile phone maker Nokia said today it would start to make laptops, entering a fiercely competitive, but fast…

The world's top mobile phone maker Nokia said today it would start to make laptops, entering a fiercely competitive, but fast-growing market.

Nokia has seen its profit margins drop over the last quarters as handset demand has slumped, and analysts have worried that entering the PC industry, where margins are traditionally razor-thin, could hurt Nokia's profits further.

"We are fully aware what has the margin level been in the PC world. We have gone into this with our eyes wide open," Kai Oistamo, the head of Nokia's key phone unit, told Reporters.

Its first netbook, the Nokia Booklet 3G, will use Microsoft's Windows software and Intel's Atom processor -- offering up to 12 hours of battery life, and weighing 1.25 kilograms. Netbooks are low-cost laptops optimised for surfing the Internet and performing other basic applications. Pioneered by Asutek in 2007, other brands such as HP and Dell have also pushed out their own lines since then.

READ MORE

Research firm IDC expects netbook shipments this year to grow more than 127 percent from 2008 to over 26

million units, outperforming the overall PC market that is expected to remain flat and a phone market which is shrinking some 10 per cent.

Nokia said it would unveil detailed specifications, market availability and pricing of the device on September 2nd.

A source close to Nokia said the new netbook would use the upcoming Windows 7 operating system. Microsoft says a stripped-down version of Windows 7 will be introduced to netbooks the same time as its general release on October 22nd.

Reuters