http://www.technologyreview.com/TR/wtr_16705,323,p1.html

riday, April 14, 2006
Town of Nokia Giving Up Landlines

Nokia, Finland will outfit all its municipal workers with mobile phones.

By Associated Press

HELSINKI, Finland (AP) -- The Finnish town of Nokia, left in the shadow of
its more famous namesake company, is going mobile.

Nokia's municipal workers will be given cellular handsets to replace their
landline phones in a move aimed at improving communication, officials said.

''People will be able to call direct to officials' mobile phones,'' said
Martin Andersson, the town's project leader for information technology.
''The main aim is to make employees more reachable.''

The town of 28,000 in southern Finland, where Nokia Corp. started 140 years
ago as a wood-pulp mill, will provide 1,300 municipal employees with mobile
handsets by June, when their landline numbers will automatically connect to
cell phones.

Switching to mobile phones will also save landline phone costs and will not
be more expensive for customers calling town officials, Andersson said.

''For some time now, many town officials have been more easily reached on
their cell phones anyway,'' he said, adding that the town hall's only
landline numbers will be a few dozen fax machines.

The Nokia company shifted from pulp to gum boots, car tires and cables when
it was based in the town, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) north of
Helsinki. It also made televisions and home electronics products before
becoming the world's leading mobile phone maker in 1998.

Nokia Corp., which no longer has a presence in Nokia and had no role in the
town's decision, moved to Helsinki in 1991 and is now based in Espoo, near
the Finnish capital.


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