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Nokia has predicted that while global mobile market will grow 10 percent this year its own growth will remain flat and its ailing network sector, Nokia Siemens Networks
-- a joint venture between Nokia Corp. and Siemens AG of Germany -- continues to see revenue fall. Kallasvuo's departure was hinted at as early as July. When announcing the company's second-quarter earnings report, he conceded that rumors that he might be replaced were "not good for Nokia, and in one way or other we should be able to solve the problem to end the speculation." As cell phone markets have become saturated, Nokia increasingly has turned to providing more services, such as music and video downloads, navigational maps and games, in a global online market it estimates will reach euro100 billion this year, with some 300 million active users by 2011. The appointment of Elop thus fits well into the pattern of closer ties between the world's top handset maker and the software giant, which have grown in recent years. In 2009, Nokia launched its first laptop, a netbook with a 10-inch screen that runs on Microsoft's Windows 7 software. Previously, access to some of Microsoft's most popular Web services, like Hotmail and Windows Live Messenger, have been built into Nokia phone models. Nokia, based in Espoo near Helsinki, employs 130,000 people worldwide. ___ Online:
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