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Ollila also said half of the mobile giant's new phones next year would support third-generation ... Nokia says smartphone marke
Nokia, which leads the market for cheaper phones, has been adding new models to its medium and higher price range to try to meet competition from second-placed rival Motorola and number-three handset maker Samsung Electronics .
Ollila said Nokia would ship more than 40 million mobiles with integrated music players this year and repeated that it expected to sell 100 million camera-phones in 2005.
Nokia announced three new models -- two new multimedia phones and one able to receive mobile TV broadcasts -- to be part of its upmarket N-series that includes phones with high-quality cameras and expanded music players.
Nokia's Multimedia division general manager Anssi Vanjoki told the Barcelona conference the N71 would be a "true Internet device," with a sizeable screen, 3G technology and ability to use wireless broadband.
The Finnish mobile giant also announced a new Web browser for its smartphones, handsets which are mainly aimed at business users and offer limited PC-type functions such as e-mail.
"With this Nokia N71, we are bringing to the consumer ... a completely new way of browsing the Web," Vanjoki told Nokia's annual Mobility Conference. The phone is expected to reach the market in the first quarter of next year, at a price of about 400 euros before taxes and subsidies.
It is equipped with third-generation mobile technology and offers WLAN broadband connections, allowing Internet access through "hot spots" in airports and cafes using the short-range wireless technology common in laptop computers.
The third in the new trio is the N92, a mobile TV with a 2.8 inch screen, able to use DVB-H (Digital Video Broadcasting-Handheld) technology to pick up broadcasts direct from TV masts, not through mobile operators.
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