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Nokia: Don't forget about voice

Marguerite Reardon CNET News

Published: 06 Apr 2006 10:25 BST

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For all the hype surrounding TV and music downloads on mobile phones, at the end of the day the mobile market is still about voice communication, according to Jorma Ollila, Nokia's departing chief executive.

Mobile phone growth has exploded over the past decade and a half. When Ollila took over as chief executive of Nokia in 1992, less than 1 percent of the world's population used mobile phones, he said during a keynote speech in Las Vegas at CTIA Wireless 2006 on Wednesday. Today there are roughly 2.2 billion mobile users in the world, and that number is expected to grow to 3 billion by the end of 2008.

Pressure from increased competition has driven down the cost of voice minutes, forcing carriers to focus on new applications, such as mobile TV, music downloads and mobile email, to help boost profits.

But Ollila, who is considered a key figure in the development of the mobile phone market, warned the industry not to lose sight of the fact that voice applications will continue to be dominant on cell phones.

"Mobile voice is still the killer application," he said. "Subscriber growth is still fuelled by voice, and voice will be the most valuable form of communication for a long time still. There is still much work to do to improve voice connections and handsets."

Ollila, who is stepping down as Nokia's chief executive on 1 June to become a nonexecutive chairman at Royal Dutch Shell, said much of the new growth in the mobile market will come from developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America.

"There is rapid growth in the low-income and developing worlds," he said. "We are seeing dual markets emerge. Take India as an example. We are not only bringing mobile communications to people who have never even had access to any telephone, but we are also offering advanced service to more advanced areas like Delhi and Bangalore."

While Ollila said that voice communications will remain the primary application for mobile phones of the future, he didn't discount the importance of new features such as cameras and video players. Many of the phones Nokia is introducing come equipped with cameras. It is also working on devices that will support DVB-H, a technology that will allow carriers to use multicast to broadcast live video to mobile phones.

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