It’s official: Google now owns Motorola Mobility.
The two companies announced that Google’s $12.5 billion takeover bid closed on Tuesday, only four days after the Chinese government, which had been holding up the purchase for weeks, granted its blessing on Saturday.
“Motorola is a great American tech company that has driven the mobile
revolution, with a track record of over 80 years of innovation,
including the creation of the first cell phone,” Larry Page, Google’s
CEO and co-founder, said in a statement. “We all remember Motorola’s StarTAC,
which at the time seemed tiny and showed the real potential of these
devices. And as a company who made a big, early bet on Android, Motorola
has become an incredibly valuable partner to Google.”
And, of course, Google hopes Motorola will be even more valuable as
an acquisition. Page also announced that Google veteran Dennis Woodside
is taking over as the phone and tablet maker’s chief executive,
replacing Motorola’s Sanjay Jha. Woodside, who oversaw Google’s purchase
of Motorola Mobility and is a mergers and acquisitions lawyer, has been
with Google since 2003.
“I’ve known Dennis for nearly a decade, and he’s been phenomenal at
building teams and delivering on some of Google’s biggest bets,” Page
said. “One of his first jobs at Google was to put on his backpack and
build our businesses across the Middle East, Africa, Eastern Europe and
Russia. More recently he helped increase our revenue in the U.S. from
$10.8 billion to $17.5 billion in under three years as President of the
Americas region.”
Jha has officially stepped down, but he will be assisting in the transition of Woodside as chief executive, Google said.
“Our aim is simple: to focus Motorola Mobility’s remarkable talent on
fewer, bigger bets, and create wonderful devices that are used by
people around the world,” Woodside said in a statement.
Not wasting any time, Woodside has already assembled his executive
team, “including Regina Dugan (former Director of DARPA), Mark Randall
(former supply chain VP at Amazon and previously at Nokia), Vanessa
Wittman (former CFO of Marsh & McLennan), Scott Sullivan (former
head of HR at Visa and NVIDIA), and Gary Briggs (former Google VP of
Consumer Marketing),” Motorola Mobility said.
The Chinese Anti-Monopoly Bureau approved Google’s bid to buy Motorola Mobility, following approvals from regulators in the U.S.
and Europe, with the stipulation that Google agree to keep its Android
mobile operating system free to hardware makers (and anyone else who
wants to use it) for the next five years.
Google, which has made Android available at no cost and open-sourced
since its debut in 2007, agreed to the terms and said again on Tuesday
that Android will remain an open operating system.
The Mountain View firm hasn’t said much of what it plans to do with
Motorola Mobility, other than stating that Motorola will remain a
licensee of Android and continue to run as a separate business. But
speculation as to what Motorola’s future looks like has fairly been
widespread with some pointing to Motorola as one of multiple Nexus phone partners, to the company being used as patent-troll repellant, and significant layoffs.
2012/05/22
Google Now Owns Motorola Mobility With $12.5 Billion
Posted by Unknown on 11:00 PM in Android Android News Gadget Technologi | Comments : 0
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