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NEW YORK Nokia’s purchase last week of Enpocket is yet another sign that the Finnish company plans on becoming much more to consumers than a seller of cell phones and multimedia devices.
The $57 billion manufacturing giant is embarking on a strategy to introduce content and services that connect consumers in ways that will put it in competition with social networking sites such as MySpace.
Case in point: Nokia’s rollout of a mobile content sharing platform known as MOSH, which enables consumers to swap photos, videos and audio files via cell phone.
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