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This article was published on May 19, 2016

Microsoft just sold what was left of Nokia to Apple supply chain partner Foxconn


Microsoft just sold what was left of Nokia to Apple supply chain partner Foxconn

After making a big splash in 2014 by acquiring Nokia, Microsoft has effectively sold it off to Apple supply chain partner Foxconn for $350 million.

The actual buyer is listed as FIH Mobile Ltd., which is a subsidiary of Foxconn. In the deal, FIH will also get Microsoft’s phone manufacturing facility in Vietnam.

Microsoft is also relenquishing the Nokia brand, software, services, care network, supply agreements and customer contracts.

Yay Cheap Plastic!
Yay Cheap Plastic!

This doesn’t mean Microsoft is moving away from phones in any way — it will just stop producing Nokia devices. In announcing the sale, Microsoft says it “will continue to develop Windows 10 Mobile and support Lumia phones such as the Lumia 650, Lumia 950 and Lumia 950 XL, and phones from OEM partners like Acer, Alcatel, HP, Trinity and VAIO.”

Though the deal doesn’t specifically name Nokia, feature phones are the only division still using the Nokia brand; Microsoft stopped branding its Lumia handsets with the Nokia logo long ago. Some still believe there is a Surface Phone in the works, even though the company’s efforts with Lumia have gone stagnant.

Recently, Microsoft laid off just under 8,000 workers from its phone division, and wrote off the $7.6 billion it spent on Nokia. Perhaps we should have seen this coming anyway.

via The Verge

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