Nokia is facing a setback at the global launch of its music service
in the UK later this month because the country's big four mobile
operators are not planning to sell it.
Vodafone, O2 , Orange and
T-Mobile are not expecting to use their high street stores to offer
Nokia's handsets featuring its unlimited music download service in the
run-up to Christmas.
It would be a setback for Nokia, the biggest
mobile handset maker, which is beginning an ambitious strategy of
putting services such as music on to phones. It also underlines
tensions between Nokia and the operators.
Nokia's Comes With Music service was unveiled last night at a global launch party in London.
Two
Nokia handsets featuring the service, which offers consumers the
ability to download as much music as they want over a 12 or 18 month
subscription period, go on sale on October 16 in the UK.
However,
Nokia's long-awaited 5800 mobile, its first touchscreen smartphone, is
not one of the two launch models for the service because it will not go
on sale in the UK until next year.
The UK is the only market
where the Comes With Music service will be available this year. It will
expand into continental Europe, Asia and the US next year.
In the
short term, Nokia is likely to have to rely on Carphone Warehouse, the
mobile phone retailer, to be the UK distribution channel for its Comes
With Music-enabled handsets. Nokia will also use its London shop and
website.
The two Nokia handsets featuring the service that go on sale in the UK with Carphone later this month are the 5310 and the N95.
Priced
at £130 ($229), the 5310 will be available on pay-as-you-go deals, and
Carphone is the exclusive UK distribution channel for the handset this
year.
The N95 will be tied to monthly contracts with the operators, although Nokia said Carphone had not yet provided pricing details.
The
cost of the contracts will be partly determined by Carphone's
commercial arrangements with the operators for subsidising handsets.
Many mobiles tied to monthly contracts are given free to consumers.
It
remains unclear how many operators will agree to provide network
coverage for the Comes With Music-enabled 5310 and N95 from October 16.
Nokia said: "We are optimistic we will have several operators on board by the end of the year."
From : http://www.ft.com/