Skip to main content

What could have been: A leaked shot of Nokia’s Android phone

Nokia Normandy Leak

At the end of December, there was a lot of fuss over a device codename Normandy, a low-end Nokia phone. Why? Because it supposedly runs a forked version of Android, and not Windows Phone or Nokia’s own Series 40 software. Now, the phone has popped up again in a series of leaks, this time showing a press render of the device, indicating Nokia is – or was – planning to release the phone.

The new leaks began on January 12, when what was described as an, “engineering prototype,” of the Normandy was leaked through a Twitter account. The image shows the same phone seen in December, characterized by the back arrow below the screen, all wrapped up in a rubber protective case. According to the tweet, the image originated on the Chinese social network Sina Weibo.

Nokia Normandy PrototypeTwo days later, infamous Twitter-based phone leaker @evleaks came up with an image too. Again, the phone resembles those leaked before it, but this time in a more traditional press render setting. A green Normandy is flanked by multiple phones in various colors, with the center device giving us a look at the user interface.

As expected, it doesn’t look anything like Android. We’d been told the OS would have a Live Tile-style UI, and sure enough, the design has more in common with Windows Phone than it does Android. While this would see the Normandy fit in with the rest of Nokia’s family, we doubt it would be well received by Microsoft. Ultimately, the fate of the Normandy will probably come down to Microsoft, unless Nokia can get the phone out the door before the takeover is finalized.

So, will the Normandy come, like some believe, in 2014? There’s certainly an outside chance. If it’s going to do so, Mobile World Congress at the end of February seems like a likely launchpad.

Editors' Recommendations

Andy Boxall
Senior Mobile Writer
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
These 80+ apps could be running adware on your iPhone or Android device
Illustration of an infected iPhone

Cybersecurity company Human has uncovered another adware campaign engaging in ad fraud that is targeting iOS and Android devices. In the simplest terms, ad fraud allows a bad actor to either visibly spam an app with ads, or to manipulate the code in such a way that the ads are invisible to the user while the bad actor extracts advertising money from a marketer.

In each iteration, it’s fraudulent. Ad fraud has been widespread in the industry for a while, and the latest investigation uncovered a cache of over 75 Android apps listed in the Google Play Store and nearly a dozen apps on Apple’s App Store that are engaged in various forms of ad fraud.

Read more
How to transfer WhatsApp messages from Android to iPhone
Two phones on a table next to each other. One is showing the WhatsApp logo, and the other is running the WhatsApp application.

It used to be that transferring WhatsApp messages from your Android device to an iPhone was a huge hassle. The key phrase here is "used to be." These days, WhatsApp has finally introduced an official method for taking your conversations from an Android phone to an iPhone, saving you time and effort.

Read more
The Nothing Phone 1 is what the OnePlus 10T could have been
OnePlus 10T camera module.

The Nothing Phone 1 and OnePlus 10T come from the same place. What's the best Android phone for your buck right now? Sure, every phone seeks to answer that question, but this is one rare occasion where we see two different companies with such a shared history deliver answers to the same question that are so different.

Both brands, driven by hype and connected by a common founder, answer the question: "What's the best phone for not so much money?"Each has a different answer. One by appealing to the specs nerd in us and throwing in all the big numbers you'd like to see, while the other thinks sparkly lights and flowery language are useful. Both, of course, rely on a cult of personality and hype.

Read more