Skip to main content

Goodbye Symbian: Nokia confirms that its 808 PureView smartphone will mark the end of the OS

Nokia Office Logo
Image used with permission by copyright holder

While many suspected that Nokia would completely eradicate the Symbian software from its mobile devices, it looks like the manufacturer has finally pulled the trigger. On Thursday the company confirmed that its 808 PureView smartphone, which launched last year, would be its last Symbian-based handset.

“During our transition to Windows Phone through 2012, we continued to ship devices based on Symbian,” the company wrote in its earnings announcement. “The Nokia 808 PureView, a device which showcases our imaging capabilities and which came to market in mid-2012, was the last Symbian device from Nokia.”

Rumors about the disappearance of Symbian are nothing new for Nokia. CEO Stephen Elop announced a while ago that the company would begin selling less Symbian devices, and now the handset maker is officially true to its word. This may come as no surprise, considering there was a significant discrepancy in the number of Symbian-based phones vs. Windows Phone-based devices sold in 2012. According to the company’s earnings report, Nokia pushed out 2.2 million Symbian handsets in Q4 2012, while it managed to sell 4.4 million Windows Phone Lumia smartphones during the same time period.

Symbian was one of the world’s leading smartphone platforms until it was dethroned by Android in 2011. The mobile medium has been in existence since 1998, when it was initially intended to act as a common smartphone platform to be shared between Nokia, Ericsson, Motorola, and Psion.

But, as the smartphone industry began to evolve and Apple and Google created their own successful mobile operating systems, Nokia acquired the lion’s share of Symbian. To further compete with the likes of Android, Nokia also decided to make Symbian an open-source mobile platform.

However, in recent times, Symbian has struggled to keep up with the over-saturated mobile market. Last quarter Symbian only accounted for 2.6 percent of smartphone shipments, paling in comparison to Android’s 72 percent of the market share.

Nokia executives noted that this would be the “last significant quarter for Symbian,” according to TechCrunch, as the company has been putting less effort toward its Symbian handsets. It seems that we can expect Nokia to be hooked on Windows Phone for the foreseeable future.

Editors' Recommendations

Lisa Eadicicco
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Lisa Eadicicco is a technology and video game reporter based in New York City. She graduated from Purchase College in 2012…
Motorola just announced three new phones, and I need them right now
Renders of the Motorola Edge 50 Pro and Edge 50 Ultra smartphones.

We're barely four months into the year, and Motorola has already had a busy 2024. After launching multiple new Moto G phones this year, the company has now announced its new Motorola Edge 50 series.

There are three phones in total, and they look like formidable alternatives to some of the best Android phones available today — including the Pixel 8 and Galaxy S24 series. Here's what you need to know.
Motorola Edge 50 Ultra

Read more
The new Insta360 X4 looks like the ultimate action camera
Insta360 X4 mounted on a car.

Insta360 just announced its new X4, which will be one of the first cameras to bring 8K to 360-degree videos. The new Insta360 camera lets you capture its highest resolution at 30 frames per second (fps) for detailed and sharp output. You can reframe the footage after shooting, and the company claims that it remains “detailed and sharp after reframing.”

The Insta360 X4 also features the ability to shoot in 4x slow-motion at 4K 100 fps, which sounds tremendous in theory. For 360-degree action shots, you also get a new 5.7K resolution at the same 60 fps for smoother and sharper shots. As with all 2024 tech hardware, the X4 includes a touch of AI – with one of the AI features letting you shoot 72MP 360-degree photos with the AI denoising feature.

Read more
3 reasons why I’ll actually use Anker’s new iPhone power bank
A person holding the Anker MagGo Power Bank.

Power banks are a necessary evil, and even if you don’t consider yourself a “power user” who's likely to drain a phone’s battery in less than a day, there will be times when one comes in handy. And when I am forced to carry one, I want it to be as helpful and versatile as possible.

I’ve been trying Anker’s MagGo Power Bank 10K -- meaning it has a 10,000mAh cell inside it -- and there are three reasons why I'm OK with it taking up valuable space in my bag.
It has a screen on it

Read more