Nokia Plans Swiss Research Facilities
Nokia and the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology in Lausanne and Zurich (EPFL and ETH Zurich) have announced the establishment of a joint long-term research program. Nokia Research Center will open a laboratory in Lausanne in June creating a community linking researchers from Nokia and the Institutes of Technology.
Nokia collaboration with the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) and the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zurich (ETH Zurich) will focus on helping people benefit from a world where they are connected to each other, to the Internet and also to information from the surrounding physical world. Access to the "Internet of Things" from a mobile device will allow people to collect information from their physical environment, filter it based on their location or preferences and share with their friends or communities.
"Nokia has already carried out a great deal of research in the field of pervasive communications, and sees the fusing of the digital and physical worlds as a key objective in mobility. We have chosen to work with the Swiss Institutes of Technology because of their expertise in this area," said Dr. Bob Iannucci, Nokia Chief Technology Officer and Head of Nokia Research Center."
Nokia Research Center collaborates with world-class universities and research institutes around the world, such as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford University in the US and University of Cambridge, UK.
"ETH Zurich welcomes the joint research efforts of its strong partners, and views the collaboration as an opportunity to devise new and innovative solutions for what has become known as the internet of things," commented Prof. Dr. Peter Chen, Vice President for Research from ETH Zurich. Scientists from three different ETH Zurich departments (Computer Science; Management, Technology and Economics; and Information Technology and Electrical Engineering) will be involved.
The opening of the new laboratory will take place on the campus in Lausanne in June 2008.
Posted to the site on 8th April 2008
