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Google still keen on Nokia: Schmidt

16 Feb 2011
00:00
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Google’s outgoing CEO Eric Schmidt said he was disappointed that Nokia elected to adopt Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 over Android, but that Google was still keen on a future deal.

“We’d like them to adopt Android, and we certainly tried,” he said during a Q&A session following his keynote speech at Mobile World Congress Tuesday.

Schmidt also said that “the offer remains open” should Nokia change its mind.

Schmidt – making his second consecutive appearance at MWC, and his last as Google’s CEO – acknowledged Microsoft as being Google’s biggest competitor, albeit still mainly in the search engine space with Bing.

“Bing is a good search engine – almost too good,” he joked in reference to recent reports that Bing had allegedly copied Google’s search algorithms.

ComScore announced earlier this week that Bing’s search share grew to just over 13% in January largely at the expense of Google, whose search share dropped to 65.6%.

Schmidt denied that Facebook was shaping up as a formidable competitor in the advertising space. “There’s no evidence I’m aware of that it’s hurting our ad business,” he said.

Schmidt also addressed developer complaints of Android being too fragmented between different handset vendors.

 

“Android’s licensing agreement comes with an ‘anti-fragmentation’ clause',” which aims to encourage vendors to conform with certain APIs when they design Android-based products, Schmidt said. He explained that the incentive is access to Android Marketplace.

 

“No operator wants to be in the ecosystem without access to all the apps,” he said. “That’s what we have, because we don’t want to force everyone along in lockstep.”

 

Schmidt’s speech focused on personalization as the next major search trend, from more personalized search results to targeted, context-aware mobile ads, all based on extensive user data. This prompted Schmidt to pepper his talk with the phrase “with your permission” as an acknowledgement that personalization is an opt-in proposition.

 

“Most people trust brands that are trustworthy,” he said. “If you offer people something that’s of value to them, they’ll opt in.”

 

SEE OUR COMPLETE COVERAGE OF MOBILE WORLD CONGRESS 2011

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