Ik ben wel de laatste die in complot theorieen gelooft maar onderstaand verhaal , door Michal Jerz , is een zeer aannemelijk verhaal.
Microsoft die het "open source gevaar" Meego (linux based) Netbook , Handset , In vehicle , Connected TV en Media phone in 1 keer de nek om draait.
"After analysing the situation, I am more and more convinced that Nokia was FORCED to do this because otherwise it was threatened with a HOSTILE TAKEOVER.
If you check the structure of Nokia's institutional investors, you will notice that most of them are quite strongly connected with Microsoft. And it was them who was used by Microsoft to take Nokia. They must have threatened that if Nokia does not accept CEO from Microsoft then they'll start trading their shares, etc.
Nokia's institutional investors are only in 10% Finns. 90% is non-Finns, mainly American, and in a huge degree connected with Microsoft.
It is NOT Nokia who wanted Microsoft. It is Microsoft who wanted Nokia. And they got it.
Why they wanted Nokia? For hardware, of course, but NOT ONLY.
They also WANTED to destroy MeeGo, which is a system not only for smartphones, but also for set-top boxes, netbooks, tablets, laptops, multimedia systems, etc. And as such, it is a direct competitor not just (and not mainly) to Microsoft's WP7, but first of all to desktop WINDOWS. And it is open source, i.e. something that Microsoft feels THREATENED with.
It was a COUP, guys.
Nokia's shares over years got in WRONG HANDS. Institutions closely connected with Microsoft took control over Nokia by buying their shares. And on Friday (or actually when they enforced Elop) they did what they were supposed to do.
Nothing to do with Nokia (i.e. the actual company) or Finns at it. Nothing to do with Nokia willing to drop Symbian or MeeGo. It's all about MICROSOFT willing to take over Nokia and destroy MeeGo and Symbian. If Nokia didn't accept Elop, things would probably look even worse as some massive tranding with shares would start and either ruin the company, or put it DIRECTLY in Microsoft's hands, anyway.
This is not the first time Microsoft did it this way, only with Nokia it took them MUCH LONGER than with so many other, smaller companies they took over in the past."
http://www.my-symbian.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=42801