Featured Articles

Cooler Master HAF XM reviewed

Cooler Master HAF XM reviewed

Cooler Master introduced the new HAF XM on April 24. The company's HAF series is instantly recognizable, although the XM moniker…

More...
Cedar Trail to last to Q1 2013

Cedar Trail to last to Q1 2013

Intel Cedar Trail, in both the desktop and notebook variants, will most likely remain unchanged until the end of Q1 2013.…

More...
50 percent of next-gen netbooks will be fanless

50 percent of next-gen netbooks will be fanless

Intel has at least two different design kits for different netbook form factors that should revive this category in 2012. Well,…

More...
Galaxy S III preorders hit 9 million

Galaxy S III preorders hit 9 million

Worldwide preorders for Samsung’s new flagship phone have reportedly hit 9 million. According to Korean media, more than 100 carriers are…

More...
EVGA GTX 690 4GB previewed

EVGA GTX 690 4GB previewed

Geforce GTX 690 launched on May 3, but it wasn’t until recently that first batches of cards were shipped to stores.…

More...
Frontpage Slideshow | Copyright © 2006-2010 orks, a business unit of Nuevvo Webware Ltd.
Friday, 27 January 2012 10:17

Ballmer wrote a $250 million cheque to Nokia

Written by Nick Farrell



Keeping the rubber boot maker on side


Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer wrote a huge cheque for $250 million to the former rubber boot maker Nokia in the last quarter.

The figure appears in Nokia's fourth quarter earnings report and is under the cryptic heading "platform support payments." This is the money that Vole is paying to Nokia to adopt Windows Phone 7. Nokia certainly needed the cash. Its sales of $13.2 billion in the quarter were down 21 per cent from the same period a year ago and it lost a 1.07 billion euros which could not be found down the back of the sofa.

The outfit can take comfort from the fact that it sold 1.5 million Windows phones in the quarter which means that the relationship with Redmond at least is paying off and should get better as time goes on. Nokia said that the strategic agreement with Microsoft includes platform support payments from Microsoft to us as well as software royalty payments from us to Microsoft. It did not say how much Nokia would pay back to Vole in software royalties, but it does say that it is paying the minimum.

Still Microsoft will get most of its $250 million back from Nokia eventually.

blog comments powered by Disqus

To be able to post comments please log-in with Disqus

Facebook activity

Latest Commented Articles

Recent Comments