SAN FRANCISCO โ Thereโs lots to say about Nokiaโs latest smart phone, the 930.
It has a 5-in. screen, can be charged wirelessly, has a 20 MP camera, will ship with Windows Phone 8.1, includes four microphones for improved sound recording with video, runs on LTE networks and is powered by a 2.2 Ghz Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processor.
What we canโt tell you is when it will come to Canada.
For a variety of reasons it will be shipped first to Asia and Europe. A similar model, called the Nokia Icon, is already in the U.S., exclusively sold through Verizon. To run on Verizonโs network it has to be capable of defaulting to its older and slower CDMA network for voice calls and when the LTE data network isnโt available. That limitation doesnโt exist on any Canadian carrier, so when will it be sold in Canada?
In an interview here, where the handset was announced at the Microsoft Build conference, Nokia vice-president of marketing Hans Henrik Lund couldnโt say. However, he did allow that the odds are the Icon wonโt be coming north.
The 930 will cost about US$600 without subsidies, which puts it as a higher-end device, as expected with a large screen size.
Microsoft expects its deal to buy the handset division of Nokia will close this month.
Lund said the 930 will be appealing to business users because of its combination of sleek design, high-end camera, imaging software, plus WinPhone 8.1.
Organizations are very interested in Nokia smart phones, he said. โYou have CIOs who have been customers of Microsoft for many, many years โ Office solutions, cloud solutions, all kinds of solutions โฆ and now they say โWe can see the same Microsoft software is available on (smart) phones.โ They trust Microsoft, they trust the software and they see the benefit of using it cross platform.
โMicrosoft has built some really cool features in terms of security (in the new WinPhone 8.1) โ VPN (virtual private network capability), S/MIME, remote wipe โ that make it very efficient and very secure.โ