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A company made up of former Nokia employees has shown off Jolla, a new
smartphone with a custom operating system known as Sailfish.
The software has been built from the remnants of MeeGo, a project abandoned by
Nokia in 2011 in favour of adopting Windows Phone for its handsets.
The Jolla phone - pronounced Yol-la - is due to be released by the end of the
year, and will only be sold online.
It will enter a market already heavily crowded with several operating systems.
"For a couple of years we haven't had anything really interesting in the mobile
phone market," said Antti Saarnio, chairman and co-founder of Jolla.
"This creates opportunities for newcomers to come in. It's different, but it's
purposefully different."
The Other Half
The phone has a 4.5in screen, with an eight megapixel camera. It also supports
4G and is compatible with apps made for Google's Android.
Among the handset's other features is what the company has called "The Other
Half."
The coloured back of the phone is interchangeable - and the operating system's
interface will change depending on what type of cover you have.
Start Quote
Everybody felt so strongly that they wanted to continue
Antti Saarnio Chairman, Jolla
These changes could include, for example, team colours for a football team.
"You connect it to the phone, and the user interface reflects the players and
colours of the team," Mr Saarnio told the BBC.
"It's an interesting way to show you 'belong' with something."
He would not confirm how exactly this feature works - but many speculate the
use of near-field communication (NFC) technology.
Splinter group
Mr Saarnio left Nokia in 2011, along with several other employees who had been
working on a joint Nokia-Intel project to create a new mobile operating system
to rival the likes of Apple's iOS and Google Android.
Nokia released one handset running the MeeGo software, the N9-00.
Mr Saarnio felt it was not given enough of a chance to succeed.
Jolla smartphone The smartphone will initially only be sold online
"The team really felt that this was one of the best phones in the market, even
though it was quite under-marketed," he said.
"Everybody felt so strongly that they wanted to continue."
Several of the team left the Finnish mobile giant to start their own company
and remain working on MeeGo, which it has renamed Sailfish.
Despite leaving the company, Mr Saarnio said he wished Nokia well - and that
Jolla was open to letting them use Sailfish in future handsets.
"We are actually quite open - we are offering this operating system for other
smartphone makers to use.
"Let's wait and see and we will just do our best in our business."