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Monday, 18 November 2013

Lumia series

Lumia series
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Lumia series is a line of smartphones and tablet computers designed and marketed by Nokia. Introduced in November 2011, the line was the result of a long-term partnership between Nokia and Microsoft—as such, all Lumia smartphones run the Windows Phone operating system, aiming to compete against the iPhone and Android-based devices. The Lumia name is derived from the partitive plural form of the word 'lumi', which means 'snow' in the Finnish language.
On 3 September 2013, Microsoft announced its intent to acquire Nokia's mobile device business, expected to close in early 2014. As part of the deal,Microsoft will acquire rights to the Lumia and Asha brands from Nokia, but will be unable to use the Nokia brand on future devices following the acquisition.[1][2] The following month, Nokia extended the Lumia brand into tablets with the unveiling of a Windows RT tablet under the brand.
Contents
·         1 History
·         2 List of devices
·         3 Model comparison
·         4 Sales
·         5 Android prototypes
·         6 References
·         7 External links
History[]
From 1988 to 2012, Nokia was the largest vendor of mobile phones in the world, which included early smartphones built on its Symbian platform. However, in recent years, its market share declined as a result of the growing use of touchscreen smartphones from other vendors, such as Apple's iPhone line and Android-based products. In 2010, its market share had declined to 28%, and in April 2012, Samsung Electronics (a prominent user of Android) ultimately overtook Nokia as the largest mobile phone vendor in the world. Nokia's CEO Stephen Elop passed on the idea of producing Android devices, believing the company wouldn't be able to suitably differentiate its Android products from that of other vendors.[3][4] In an employee memo, Elop infamously described the company as being on a "burning platform", blaming the "war of ecosystems" between iOS and Android as part of Nokia's overall struggle, and asserting that the company needed to make major changes to its operation.[5][6]
In February 2011, Stephen Elop and Microsoft's CEO Steve Ballmer jointly announced a major business partnership between Nokia and Microsoft, which would see Nokia adopt Windows Phoneas its primary platform on future smartphones, replacing both Symbian and MeeGo. The deal also included the integration of Bing as the search engine on Nokia devices, and the integration ofNokia Maps into Microsoft's own mapping services.[5] Nokia had planned to use the MeeGo platform as part of its future plans prior to the announcement, although the company announced that it would still release one MeeGo device in 2011.[5] Aligning with Microsoft had been considered a possibility by analysts due to Elop's prior employment with the company.[6]
Nokia unveiled its first Windows Phone 7-based devices, the mid-range Lumia 710 and high-end Lumia 800, on 26 October 2011 at its Nokia World conference.[7][8] Motivated by requests from the U.S. carrier AT&T for an LTE-enabled device, Nokia quickly developed the Lumia 900 as a follow-up, first unveiled at the 2012 International CES. The Lumia 900 received heavy promotion by the carrier as a flagship device, but its launch was dampened by a software bug that prevented the device from connecting to certain mobile data networks, forcing AT&T to issue $100 credits to those who purchased the device. Upon its launch in April 2012, the Lumia 900 was listed as a top seller on Amazon.com, but online sales began to tamper off by May. While not revealing further details, a Nokia representative stated that the company was "pleased with the consumer reaction, as well as the support we have received from AT&T", while AT&T's mobility chief Ralph de la Vega stated that the Lumia 900 had "exceeded expectations".[3][9]
In early 2012, Nokia released the Lumia 610, a new entry-level device taking advantage of the lower system requirements introduced by Windows Phone 7's "Tango" update. These new low-end devices were intended to improve Windows Phone adoption in emerging markets such as China.[10] Later in September 2012, Nokia unveiled the Lumia 920, its first device to use the second generation of the Windows Phone platform, Windows Phone 8. The Lumia 920 also notably featured Qi wireless charging, NFC, and a "PureView" camera with optical image stabilization. WhileNokia received criticism when it was revealed that a demonstration video of its image stabilization technology was in fact, filmed using a professional camera, the Lumia 920 was a commercial success for the company.[3][11]
In 2013, Nokia also introduced the Lumia 925, a revised version of the 920 with a slimmer build incorporating aluminium,[12] and the Lumia 1020, which features a 41-megapixel camera based on technology from its Symbian-based 808 PureView.[13]
Although sales of the Lumia line had exceeded those of BlackBerry in the same period, Nokia still made an operating loss of €115m (£98.8m), with revenues falling 24% to €5.7bn following the second quarter of 2013. Over the past nine quarters, Nokia sustained €4.1 billion worth of operating losses. The company experienced particular problems in both China and the U.S.; in the former, Nokia's handset revenues are the lowest since 2002, while in the U.S., Francisco Jeronimo, analyst for research company IDC, stated that the company "continues to show no signs of recovery in the US market. High investments, high expectations, low results."[14]
On 3 September 2013, Microsoft announced its intent to acquire Nokia's mobile phone business (including rights to the Lumia and low-end Asha brands) in an overall deal totaling at overUS$7.17bn. Stephen Elop will also step down as Nokia's CEO and re-join Microsoft as its head of devices as part of the deal, which is expected to close in early 2014 pending regulatory approval.[1] While Microsoft will license the Nokia name under a 10-year agreement, the company will only be able to use it on feature phones such as the series. These changes will result in future Lumia models being first-party hardware produced under the Microsoft brand.[2][15]
On 22 October 2013, Nokia extended the Lumia brand with the unveiling of the Lumia 2520; running Microsoft's Windows RT operating system, it is Nokia's first tablet since the Nokia Internet tablet range.[16] The Nokia Lumia 2520 will be released in th US on November 22, for $499.[17]
List of devices[]
·         Nokia Lumia 800 a high-end phone released in November 2011[18]
·         Nokia Lumia 800C, CDMA2000 variant for China Telecom.
·         Nokia Lumia 710, a mid-range phone released on January 11, 2012[19]
·         Nokia Lumia 900, the flagship phone released on April 8, 2012[20]
·         Nokia Lumia 610, an entry-level phone released in April 2012
·         Nokia Lumia 610C, CDMA2000 variant for China Telecom.
·         Nokia Lumia 510, an entry-level phone released in November 2012
·         Nokia Lumia 820, a high-end phone released in November 2012
·         Nokia Lumia 822, a high-end phone released on November 8, 2012. Exclusive to Verizon.[21]
·         Nokia Lumia 810, a high-end phone released on November 14, 2012. Exclusive on T-Mobile.[22]
·         Nokia Lumia 920 (Phi), the flagship phone released on November 2, 2012 [23]
·         Nokia Lumia 920T, TD-SCDMA variant for China Mobile[24]
·         Nokia Lumia 505, an entry-level phone for selected Third World markets including Mexico, released in December 2012
·         Nokia Lumia 620 (Sand), the first mid-range Windows Phone 8. Released in January 2013.[25]
·         Nokia Lumia 520 (Fame), an entry-level successor of Lumia 510, available Q1 2013 starting in Hong Kong and Vietnam, then rolling out elsewhere including T-Mobile US in Q2, prices start around $183 (€139).
·         Nokia Lumia 520T, TD-SCDMA variant for China Mobile
·         Nokia Lumia 720 (Zeal), a mid-range successor of Lumia 710, starts rolling out in Asia in Hong Kong, Vietnam, and Singapore in Q1 2013 before expanding to more markets in Q2, prices start at $329 (€249).
·         Nokia Lumia 720T, TD-SCDMA variant for China Mobile.
·         Nokia Lumia 928 (Lazer), U.S. carrier Verizon's exclusive version of the Lumia 920, added a Xenon-flash to the camera.
·         Nokia Lumia 925 (Catwalk), a thinner, lighter, partially aluminium re-skin of the Lumia 920, designed to broaden the appeal of the 92x range. It is a compromise between Lumia 920 and Lumia 928 features-wise.
·         Nokia Lumia 925T, TD-SCDMA variant for China Mobile
·         Nokia Lumia 1020 (Elvis, EOS), a high-end device with a 41-megapixel PureView camera, BIS sensor, OIS and a Xenon flash. Other new features include a doubled RAM at 2 GB, and a 64 GB version exclusive to Telefonica in Europe. In the U.S. the 1020 is available exclusively from AT&T beginning July 26, 2013.
·         Nokia Lumia 1320. 6" screen smartphone, announced at Nokia Press Conference on October 22, 2013.
·         Nokia Lumia 1520. 6" screen smartphone, announced at Nokia Press Conference on October 22, 2013.
·         Nokia Lumia 2520. Windows 8.1 RT tablet, announced at Nokia Press Conference on October 22, 2013.
·         Nokia Lumia 625 (Max), a mid-range Lumia with a focus of combining 4G with a large display (4.7", the first time on a Lumia), yet keeping the price in a low and affordable range.[26] It will be released worldwide in September.
Model comparison[]
First generation (Windows Phone 7)[]
Feature
Date introduced
September 2012
April 2012
January 2012
November 2011
April 2012
Minimum OS
Maximum OS
Networks
GSM, HSDPA, Wi-Fi
adds LTE
Dimensions
120.7 mm (4.75 in) H
64.9 mm (2.56 in) W
11.46 mm (0.451 in) D
119 mm (4.7 in) H
62.2 mm (2.45 in) W
11.95 mm (0.470 in) D
119 mm (4.7 in) H
62.4 mm (2.46 in) W
12.5 mm (0.49 in) D
116.5 mm (4.59 in) H
61.2 mm (2.41 in) W
12.1 mm (0.48 in) D
128 mm (5.0 in) H
69 mm (2.7 in) W
12 mm (0.47 in) D
Weight
129 g (4.6 oz)
131.5 g (4.64 oz)
126 g (4.4 oz)
142 g (5.0 oz)
160 g (5.6 oz)
Screen
Scratch resistant glass
Gorilla Glass (Curved)
Gorilla Glass (Flat)
Screen type
AMOLED (PenTile pattern)[32]
AMOLED (RGB stripe pattern)[33]
Screen resolution
480x800
Screen size (diagonal)
4 in (100 mm)
3.7 in (94 mm)
4.3 in (110 mm)
Battery life (3G talk time)
8.4 hours
9.5 hours
7.6 hours
9.5 hours
7 hours
Battery life (video playback)
7.4 hours
7 hours
6 hours
6.5 hours
8 hours
Battery life (music playback)
38 hours
35 hours
38 hours
55 hours
60 hours
Battery life (3G standby)
653.2 hours
720 hours
400 hours
335 hours
300 hours
Battery capacity
1300mAh
1450mAh
1830mAh
Camera resolution (still)
5 MP
8 MP
Camera resolution (video)
480p @ 30 fps
720p @ 30 fps
Camera aperture
2.4
2.2
Camera lens
N/A
Carl Zeiss
Front camera
N/A
1.3 MP
Camera flash
N/A
Single-LED
Dual-LED
Storage
4 GB
8 GB
16 GB
Storage expansion
None
SoC
Snapdragon S1 MSM7227A (45 nm)
Snapdragon S2 MSM8255 (45 nm)
Snapdragon S2 APQ8055 (45 nm)
CPU
800 MHz Cortex-A5
1.4 GHz Scorpion
RAM
256 MB
512 MB
Applications
Second generation (Windows Phone 8)[]
Model
Date introduced
February 2013
December 2012
July 2013
February 2013
October 2012
September 2012
October 2012
September 2012
May 2013
July 2013
October 2013
Date discontinued
April 2013[47]
Minimum OS
Networks
GSM, HSDPA, Wi-Fi
adds LTE
GSM, HSDPA, Wi-Fi
adds LTE
Dimensions
119.9 mm (4.72 in) H
64.0 mm (2.52 in) W
9.9 mm (0.39 in) D
115.4 mm (4.54 in) H
61.1 mm (2.41 in) W
11.02 mm (0.434 in) D
133.25 mm (5.246 in) H
72.25 mm (2.844 in) W
9.15 mm (0.360 in) D
127.9 mm (5.04 in) H
67.5 mm (2.66 in) W
9.0 mm (0.35 in) D
127.8 mm (5.03 in) H
68.4 mm (2.69 in) W
10.9 mm (0.43 in) D
123.8 mm (4.87 in) H
68.5 mm (2.70 in) W
9.9 mm (0.39 in) D
127.8 mm (5.03 in) H
68.4 mm (2.69 in) W
11.2 mm (0.44 in) D
130.3 mm (5.13 in) H
70.8 mm (2.79 in) W
10.7 mm (0.42 in) D
129 mm (5.1 in) H
70.6 mm (2.78 in) W
8.5 mm (0.33 in) D
133 mm (5.2 in) H
68.9 mm (2.71 in) W
10.1 mm (0.40 in) D
130.4 mm (5.13 in) H
71.4 mm (2.81 in) W
10.5 mm (0.41 in) D
164.2 mm (6.46 in) H
85.9 mm (3.38 in) W
10.5 mm (0.41 in) D
162.8 mm (6.41 in) H
85.4 mm (3.36 in) W
8.7 mm (0.34 in) D
Weight
124 g (4.4 oz)
127 g (4.5 oz)
159 g (5.6 oz)
128 g (4.5 oz)
145 g (5.1 oz)
160 g (5.6 oz)
142 g (5.0 oz)
185 g (6.5 oz)
139 g (4.9 oz)
162 g (5.7 oz)
158 g (5.6 oz)
220 g (7.8 oz)
209 g (7.4 oz)
Screen
Scratch resistant glass
Gorilla Glass 2 (curved)
Scratch resistant glass
Gorilla Glass 2 (curved)[51]
Gorilla Glass3 (curved)
Screen type
IPS 24-bit
TFT LCDClearBlack 24-bit
IPS LCD 24-bit
IPS LCD ClearBlack 24-bit
AMOLED ClearBlack 24-bit
IPS LCD PureMotion HD+ 24-bit
AMOLED PureMotion HD+ 24-bit
IPS LCD ClearBlack 24-bit
Maximum screen luminance
600 cd/m2[52]
 ?
 ?
600 cd/m2[53]
 ?
 ?
 ?
600 cd/m2[54]
 ?
600 cd/m2[55]
Stripe pattern
RGB stripe pattern
 ?
Screen resolution
480 × 800 (15:9)
768 × 1280 (15:9)
720 × 1280 (16:9)
1080 × 1920 (16:9)
Screen size (diagonal)
101.6 mm, 4.0"
96.5 mm, 3.8"
119 mm, 4.7"
109 mm, 4.3"
114 mm, 4.5"
113 mm, 4.5"
152.4 mm, 6.0"
Pixel density
235 ppi
246 ppi
201 ppi
217 ppi
332 ppi
334 ppi
245 ppi
368 ppi
Battery life (3G talktime)
9.6 hours
9.9 hours
15.2 hours
13.4 hours
10.2 hours
8.1 hours
10.2 hours
10 hours
12.8 hours
16.2 hours
12.3 hours
21 hours
27.4 hours
Battery life (3G standby)
360 hours
330 hours
552 hours
520 hours
360 hours
330 hours
486 hours
400 hours
440 hours
541 hours
440 hours
672 hours
768 hours
Battery life (Music playback)
61 hours
61 hours
90 hours
79 hours
54 hours
61 hours
62.1 hours
74 hours
55 hours
80 hours
53 hours
98 hours
124 hours
Battery model
BL-5J
BL-4J
BP-4GWA (4.1 V) / BP-4GW (3.7 V)
BP-4W
BP-5T
BP-4W
BP-4GW
BL-4YW
BV-4NW
BV-5XW [58]
BV-4BW
Battery type
Li-ion ?? / Li-Polymer
 ?
Battery capacity
1430 mAh
1300 mAh
2000 mAh
1800 mAh
1650 mAh
1800 mAh
2000 mAh
3400 mAh
Camera resolution (still)
5.0 MP
6.7 MP
8.0 MP
8.7 MP PureView
41.3 MPPureView
5.0 MP
20.0 MPPureView
Sensor size
1/4"
1/3.6"
1/3.2"
1/3"
1/1.5"
1/4"
1/2.5"
Camera 35mm equivalentfocal length
28 mm
26 mm
25 mm for 16:9, 27 mm for 4:3[62]
28 mm
26 mm
Camera resolution (video)
1280 × 720p @ 30 fps
1920 × 1080p @ 30 fps
1280 × 720p @ 30 fps
1920 × 1080p @ 30 fps
Cameraaperture
ƒ/2.4
ƒ/1.9
ƒ/2.2
ƒ/2.0
ƒ/2.2
ƒ/2.4
Carl Zeisscamera lens
No
No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Front camera
N/A
0.3 MP
1.3 MP
1.2 MP
0.3 MP
1.2 MP
1.3 MP
1.2 MP
0.3 MP
1.2 MP
Camera flash
N/A
LED flash
Dual-LED
Short-pulse high-power dual-LED
Dual-LED
Xenon flash
Xenon and LED flash
LED
Dual-LED
Storage
8 GB
16 GB
32 GB
16 GB (32 GB Vodafone)
32 GB
8 GB
32 GB
Storage expansion
Up to 64 GB microSD
N/A
Up to 64 GB microSD
SkyDrivecloud storage
7 GB
Free bundled navigationHere
Maps, Transit, Drive (regional)
Maps, Transit, Drive+ (global)
Maps, Transit, Drive (regional)
Maps, Transit, Drive+ (global)
Maps, Transit, Drive (regional)
Maps, Transit, Drive+ (global)
SIM card size
Micro-SIM (3FF)
Nano-SIM (4FF)
FM radio ability
since WP 8 GDR2
N/A[63]
since WP 8 GDR2
N/A[64]
since Windows Phone 8 GDR2 update (upcoming release late summer 2013)[65][66]
N/A[67]
since WP 8 GDR2
since Windows Phone 8 GDR3
latestBluetoothsupport
Bluetooth + HS (v3.0) – WP8 software limits; Bluetooth Smart Low Energy (v4.0) after GDR2 / Nokia Amber update[68][69]
Bluetooth Smart Low Energy (v4.0)
Secure NFC(for payment)
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
NFC supports sharing, pairing and tagging
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Qi inductive wireless charging
No
No
No
Yes (with optional accessory cover)
Yes (with optional accessory cover)
Yes (with optional accessory cover)
Yes
Yes
Yes (with optional accessory cover)
Yes
Yes (with optional accessory cover)
No
Yes
SynapticsSuper Sensitive Touch
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Qualcomm SnapdragonS4 Plus
MSM8227 (28 nm)
QualcommSnapdragon 400
8930 (28 nm)
QualcommSnapdragonS4 Plus
MSM8227 (28 nm)
Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro
MSM8960 (28 nm)
QualcommSnapdragon400
8930AB (28 nm)
QualcommSnapdragon800 MSM8974 (28 nm)
1.0 GHz dual-core Krait
1.2 GHz dual-core Krait
1.0 GHz dual-core Krait
1.5 GHz dual-core Krait
1.7 GHz dual-core Krait
2.2 GHz dual-coreKrait
RAM
512 MB (32-bit Single-channel, LPDDR2)
512 MB (32-bit Single-channel, 533 MHz, LPDDR2)
512 MB (32-bit Single-channel, LPDDR2)
1 GB (32-bit Dual-channel, 500 MHz, LPDDR2)
2 GB (32-bit Dual-channel, 500 MHz, LPDDR2)
1 GB (32-bit Single-channel, 533 MHz, LPDDR2)
2 GB (32-bit Dual-channel, 800 MHz, LPDDR3
Model
Sales[]
Quarterly Sales of Nokia Lumia devices (in million units)
·         view

·         talk

·        
Q4 2011
Q1 2012
Q2 2012
Q3 2012
Q4 2012
Q1 2012
Q2 2013
Q3 2013
Total
Sales
North America
0.5
0.6
0.6
0.3
0.7
0.4
0.5
1.4
5
Rest of the world
0.5
1.4
3.4
2.6
3.7
5.2
6.9
7.4
31.1
Quarterly Global Sales
1
2
4
2.9
4.4
5.6
7.4
8.8
36.1
Quarterly Global Nokia Lumia Sales (million units) :
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/timeline/090c698be3378031bbd393cec6faded7.png
Data through end of September 2013.[70][71]


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