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Nokia deal to cost Microsoft ‘billions of dollars’

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Image used with permission by copyright holder

Since the now-confirmed deal between Nokia and Microsoft came to light earlier this month, everyone has been pouring over whether or not the move was a good one. But according to Nokia CEO Stephen Elop, Microsoft apparently thought it was such a good deal that they agreed to pay “billions of dollars” to have it go their way, ComputerWorld reports.

Speaking Sunday evening at the 2011 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, Elop used the occasion to further justify the Nokia-Microsoft deal, which includes Nokia — the world’s largest handset maker — abandoning its highly-popular Symbian operating system for Microsoft’s still-struggling Windows Phone 7 OS. (See the first Nokia-WP7 concept design here.)

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The other option for Nokia would presumably have been to adopt Google’s Android OS, which made gains of 888 percent in 2010, to become the second most-used OS in the world, after Symbian. But by adopting Android, Nokia would have been giving the Google OS too much weight, said Elop, essentially creating a “duopoly” between Android and Apple in the global mobile market. And with Microsoft willing to fork out “billions of dollars” to make the Nokia-Windows Phone 7 partnership a success, going with Microsoft was a no-brainer.

“We are paying them for the software,” Elop said of Microsoft. “But we won’t have to develop the software. And there will be some very apparent operating savings from doing this.”

Elop added that the deal with Microsoft gives Nokia access to the Bing search engine and to the Xbox platform. It will also provide Nokia with the opportunity to break into the mobile advertising market, an opportunity not yet possible for the Finland-based company.

In addition to discussing the benefits of Nokia partnering with Microsoft, Elop, who left Microsoft to take the helm at Nokia, fended off accusations that he was a “Trojan horse” for Microsoft, and enabled the technology giant to essential take control of Nokia.

“The obvious answer is no,” Elop said. “We made sure that the entire management team was involved in the process, and of course the board of directors of Nokia are the only ones that can make this significant of a decision about Nokia. They made that final decision on Thursday night.”

So there you have it, folks. Elop is not a secret agent for Microsoft. Good to have that cleared up.

Andrew Couts
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Features Editor for Digital Trends, Andrew Couts covers a wide swath of consumer technology topics, with particular focus on…
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