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The Galaxy Note 7 is dead. Samsung ends production after issuing worldwide recall

Yes last breaths

No, you are mistaking Microsoft's Nokia Lumia with Nokia, Nokia sold it's mobile business along with it's Lumia brand to Microsoft, and had an agreement not to use Nokia brand for 3 years or so. They were not into mobile handset business for some time, and now they are again giving it a fresh start, this time with Android phones, they will make the designs and customized software, and Foxconn will make the handsets as their OEM, same company that makes iPhones. Their yet to be launched C1 model looks sexy, and they have the brand name.....previously they went down because of the wrong selection of OS, this time they are on right track, they can give tough competition to big brands.
 
http://www.forbes.com/sites/bensin/...ok-the-risk-anyway-say-analysts/#181dc27a4995

Samsung Knew Note 7 Had A Dangerous Design, But Took The Risk Anyway, Say Analysts


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December 4, 2016
The mainstream media news cycle has moved on to other inflammatory matters recently (like: U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and his controversial cabinet picks), but within the smartphone industry, people are still wondering, "just what the hell went wrong with the Galaxy Note 7?"

After all, companies much smaller than Samsung have pumped out dozens and dozens of phones in the past few years without such incidents. How can industry giant Samsung still have no idea as to what led to the failure of its recent flagship?

Well, according to a respected independent team of hardware engineers who cracked open a Note 7 for a test recently, they've concluded that the phone's tendency to combust is due to a "fundamental problem with the design of the phone," and that Samsung sort of knew the "super aggressive" design was risky, but went with it anyway because it was trying so hard to innovate and gain a competitive edge.



In short, the phone's internals were so crammed in, the battery was continually being compressed. The pressure makes the "separator" of the positive and negative electrodes easily damaged. As you've probably read dozens of times already during the peak of the Note 7 incidents, when a battery's positive and negative bits come into contact, it generates heat continually to cause a thermal runway (aka fires).

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A photo by Instrumental of the Note 7's internals highlights just how tight the battery was crammed in. Photo: Instrumental
 
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