In 1979, the merger of Nokia and Salora resulted in the establishment of Mobira Oy. Mobira began developing mobile phones for the NMT (Nordic Mobile Telephony) network standard, the first-generation, first fully automatic cellular phone system that went online in 1981. In 1982, Mobira introduced its first car phone, the Mobira Senator for NMT-450 networks.
Nokia bought Salora Oy in 1984 and now owning 100% of the company, changed the company's telecommunications branch name to Nokia-Mobira Oy
<...> In 1989 Nokia-Mobira Oy became Nokia Mobile Phones.
Vadinas čia yra firmos pavadinimas pasiieškok, gal kur modelį užrašytą rasi.
sitas daiktas, kaip ir naujesnes plytos neturi uzraso MODEL, bet yra parasyta TYPE. Ir idomus dalykas, kad stotele ir ragelis turi atskirus numerius ir taipus
ragelis -
CU 59 M , o kita dalis -
MD 59 NB 2. Tai taip iseina, kad cia yra paprasciausias NOKIA MOBIRA OY CU59M MD59NB2
dar radau tokios istorijos:
1967: Nokia merges with Finnish Rubber Works and Finnish Cable Works to form Nokia Corporation.
1979: Mobira Oy is formed as a mobile phone company.
1981: The first international cellular system, the Nordic Mobile Telephone network, comes on line, having been developed with the help of Nokia.
1982: Nokia acquires Mobira, which later becomes the Nokia Mobile Phones division.
1986: Company markets internationally the first Nokia mobile telephone.
1993: The first Nokia digital cellular phone hits the market.
1998: Nokia surpasses Motorola as the world's number one maker of mobile phones.
Nokia's greatest success was in telecommunications. Having dabbled in telecommunications in the 1960s, Nokia cut its teeth in the industry by selling switching systems under license from a French company, Alcatel. The Finnish firm got in on the cellular industry's ground floor in the late 1970s, when it helped design the world's first international cellular system. Named the Nordic Mobile Telephone (NMT) network, the system linked Sweden, Denmark, Norway, and Finland. A year after the network came on line in 1981, Nokia gained 100 percent control of Mobira, the Finnish mobile phone company that would later become its key business interest as the Nokia Mobile Phones division.