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Nokia Shareholders Approved the $7.2 Billion Microsoft Buyout

dgstorm

Editor in Chief
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The big news for Microsoft today was the announcement that the Nokia board of directors approved the $7.2 Billion buyout offer. Fully 99.7% of the board members who participated agreed to the proposal. Here's a quote with more of the details,

Some shareholders were understandably upset over the sale of a Finnish national icon, but that hasn’t stopped the majority from approving a deal worth around $7.2 billion. The acquisition will see former Nokia CEO Stephen Elop return to Microsoft early next year to run an expanded devices and services team at the software giant.

An "open dialogue" between Nokia and Microsoft started back at Mobile World Congress in February, when Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer initiated the talks after both companies agreed the close partnership on Windows Phone wasn't working as they'd hoped. Nokia is said to have discussed the deal heavily, meeting 50 times to contemplate selling its phone business following the original Microsoft partnership in 2011. A glass coffee table nearly sank the deal after Ballmer crashed into it shortly before a meeting, leaving a nasty gash on his forehead. Microsoft may have reportedly rushed the deal, and a lot is riding on the future success of Windows Phone under a single Microsoft roof.

It’s still not clear how Microsoft plans to integrate Nokia’s Lumia and Asha lines with the company’s internal structure and own Windows Phone marketing. Ballmer admitted Microsoft and Nokia could do better as one company on naming conventions; he said recently that a benefit of being one company is that Microsoft will be able to avoid names such as "the Nokia Lumia Windows Phone 1020." Microsoft and Nokia had to keep secrets from each other before, but Microsoft will own the Asha and Lumia brands once the deal is finalized early next year. Microsoft could choose to unite them under its own Surface device brand, or even alter their naming altogether, but the company isn't revealing its plans yet.

It will be interesting to see how things evolve for both companies after they are merged under the same umbrella.

Source: The Verge
 
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