Really? I think Palm was dead when HP bought it and that HP is going to inadvertently squeeze out and waste whatever life was left in the platform. All of Palm's creative talent is gone (to Nokia?). In spite of being American and having a solid following and a capable development community and receiving extensive praise from American media and bloggers, Palm has never really gained any traction on its home turf and it's virtually unheard of elsewhere in the world. I think you can stick a fork in Palm, HP or otherwise.
With regards to Motorola, like I said, I don't think that buying Motorola makes business sense. Paying a lot of money to buy a company that doesn't make any money isn't smart. Plus, Motorola has debt that Nokia would have to assume. On the other hand, I think that a lot of the reason Motorola doesn't make money is manufacturing-related and if a lowest-cost-operator like Nokia could do the manufacturing and distribution it's possible that they could turn Motorola profitable and achieve savings that way while still letting Motorola operate semi-autonomously and without cutting R&D. I'm not sure how practical that is, though. In reality, I think Motorola is a pig and that buying it at this price would be a poor business move.
EDIT: Just looked more closely at Motorola. Motorola's gross profits are lower, its R&D expenses higher and its selling, general and administrative expenses higher as a percentage of revenues than Nokia's.
I do like the two-brand idea in principle, though. In fact, Nokia already has this concept in place with Vertu so it would be a third brand.
In other business thoughts, I'd like to see Nokia divest itself of NSN. They might have the opportunity to do so in the next couple years for a nice price at the peak of the 4G deployment cycle, but the sooner the better, IMO.
With regards to Motorola, like I said, I don't think that buying Motorola makes business sense. Paying a lot of money to buy a company that doesn't make any money isn't smart. Plus, Motorola has debt that Nokia would have to assume. On the other hand, I think that a lot of the reason Motorola doesn't make money is manufacturing-related and if a lowest-cost-operator like Nokia could do the manufacturing and distribution it's possible that they could turn Motorola profitable and achieve savings that way while still letting Motorola operate semi-autonomously and without cutting R&D. I'm not sure how practical that is, though. In reality, I think Motorola is a pig and that buying it at this price would be a poor business move.
EDIT: Just looked more closely at Motorola. Motorola's gross profits are lower, its R&D expenses higher and its selling, general and administrative expenses higher as a percentage of revenues than Nokia's.
I do like the two-brand idea in principle, though. In fact, Nokia already has this concept in place with Vertu so it would be a third brand.
In other business thoughts, I'd like to see Nokia divest itself of NSN. They might have the opportunity to do so in the next couple years for a nice price at the peak of the 4G deployment cycle, but the sooner the better, IMO.