Das Interview, das Elop am 05. Februar in Australien gegeben hat, lässt sich hier im Wortlaut nachlesen: http://www.smh.com.au/technology/technology-news/...130205-2dv10.html Das ist sehr interessant und klärt viele Fragen, die hier immer wieder auftauchen. Z. B. zu Lieferengpässen Q4: Journalist Paul Smith, The Australian Financial Review What was the constraint? Nokia CEO Stephen Elop It was supply constraints on particular components. We don't specify the components out of respect for the specific supply companies whether it was certain components that weren't available in the increasing levels of production that we were looking for. … zu L920-Verkaufszahlen: Journalist Paul Smith, The Australian Financial Review You mentioned the recent results where you spoke about the positive sales. One thing I thought was a bit unclear at the time was with the Lumia sales, whether it was the high-end Lumias versus the low-end Lumias that were selling better. Can you give us some more clarity on that? Nokia CEO Stephen Elop So we don't break out by model number and so forth. The one thing we did say was that the high-end device, the Lumia 920, was supply constrained during Q4, which essentially said that we could not produce at the level of demand. And so it's actually hard to predict how many we could have or would've sold under those circumstances but clearly we're very pleased with the uptake of the devices. … zu angestrebten Marktanteilen WinPhone-Ökosystem We've often said as a first milestone, and I'm not being precise in what timeframe, but the first important milestone is to get the Windows Phone ecosystem up into the double digit [market] share. (…) I don't want to set a specific number or a specific timeframe but clearly we're looking at moving to that double digit market share as quickly as we can. …zu neuen Patenten/Innovationskraft So our research and development effort is now heavily biased towards those things that make us stand out. Now the impact of that is actually quite interesting. I don't have the final numbers of all of 2012 in my head but it was the case in the first six months of 2012 we filed more patents, in other words we developed more innovation, more new ideas, more things that no one else had thought of than anytime in Nokia's history dating back to 2007
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