Finland-based telecom equipment giant Nokia (NYSE: NOK) has been in the spotlight this winter. The stock was swept up in the Reddit short-squeeze drama, which pushed Nokia's share prices to nearly 10-year highs that were gone as quickly as they arrived. The episode also generated the highest trading volumes in Nokia's history. It's safe to say that many Nokia investors were introduced to the stock this year. Everybody knows Nokia as the former king of near-indestructible cellphones and, more recently, as a global provider of telecom network equipment and services. That's just scratching the surface of Nokia's rich history, though. Most Nokia investors will learn something new from the list below. Image source: Getty Images. 1. Nokia wasn't always a telephone company The company was founded in 1865, long before the invention of wireless networks and mobile phones. I mean, this company is really old. Alexander Graham Bell invented the wired phone 10 years later, and the households of Europe and North America didn't have widespread access to electricity until the 1930s. The first few decades of Nokia's business history actually concern a single paper mill that later expanded into a network of pulp mills and paper factories. 2. The next big idea wasn't phones, either Nokia absorbed another company known as the Finnish Rubber Works in 1920, allowing that business to operate under the respected brand name that Nokia had established in the paper business. The company made a particularly strong name for itself in the rubber footwear business, competing against Russian manufacturers. Rubber boots introduced Nokia to foreign markets. 3. From cables to phone systems By 1967, Nokia had merged with Finnish Cable Works in a natural partnership that sprung from the up-and-coming cable manufacturer's need for quality rubber materials. That's where Nokia's journey into electronics really started. The paper operations were sold off piece by piece and then followed by a complete separation in 1988 from what's now known as Nokian Tyres. Image source: Getty Images. 4. Pulling the cellphone market up by the bootstraps The company was an early leader in wireless phone technologies. The first phone call made over the GSM standard was achieved with Nokia equipment. By 1998, Nokia had become the market-leading cellphone maker we all remember from the pre-smartphone days, followed by a sharp shift into the network equipment market in 2011. 5. Change of plans Nokia's popular voice-and-text phones just couldn't compete with game-changing Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) iPhones and Alphabet's (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) Androids. Nokia sold its mobile devices division to Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) in 2014, shortly after the acquisition of network equipment assets from German rival Siemens. In 2015, Nokia also picked up French-American peer Alcatel-Lucent in a $16 billion deal, essentially completing the shape of the company we see today. 6. Next up: 5G networks Nokia was not only an instrumental developer of the 5G wireless networking standards, but also one of the leading names in the 5G hardware market. 5G products are sold at a premium, generating stronger profit margins as the 5G revenue stream grows. "We will invest whatever it takes to win in 5G," Nokia CEO Pekka Lundmark said in early February's earnings report. That sounds like a profitable business plan that can generate sustained bottom-line growth for the next few years. Image source: Getty Images. 7. Nokia looks like a buy right now Way back in November 2020, before the Reddit-powered mania and the resulting price spike, I picked up a few Nokia shares for myself. The Reddit episode is behind us, and Nokia's stock has cooled down to a reasonable valuation again. This is still a global power player in the explosive 5G market and the stock is trading at bargain-bin prices. You can pick up Nokia shares for 14 times forward earnings and 0.9 times trailing sales. This is the only stock among the Reddit short-squeeze targets I wouldn't mind buying today. 10 stocks we like better than NokiaWhen investing geniuses David and Tom Gardner have a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the newsletter they have run for over a decade, Motley Fool Stock Advisor, has tripled the market.* David and Tom just revealed what they believe are the ten best stocks for investors to buy right now... and Nokia wasn't one of them! That's right -- they think these 10 stocks are even better buys. See the 10 stocks *Stock Advisor returns as of November 20, 2020 Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Teresa Kersten, an employee of LinkedIn, a Microsoft subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Anders Bylund owns shares of Alphabet (A shares) and Nokia. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Alphabet (A shares), Alphabet (C shares), Apple, and Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.Source