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Re: Odd reply from Stephen Elop
Until further notice, 'both' simply means Lumia (as in WP7.5) and future products (which we can safely presume mean Nokia WP8 smartphones and S40/Asha devices.
'Products' is a wide description, it does not refer solely to smartphones but could mean all peripherals....any accessory, tablet, etc. There is no change in smartphone strategy. |
Re: Odd reply from Stephen Elop
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Re: Odd reply from Stephen Elop
What are we talking about future products from Nokia? Nokia is dying right before your eyes; do you honestly think Nokia has any future? Nokia has burnt all its bridges, tied its future to WP and lost. Kicked, betrayed, backstabbed and killed by its so-called partner, Microsoft. Let me give you a rundown.
The Kick: Microsoft reveals its own Windows 8 tablet So much for Elop's gung-ho about producing WP tablets as a future product. The Betrayal: Microsoft introduces Windows Phone 8 for fall release, incompatible with current devices This mean Nokia has practically nothing to sell for the next 2 quarters. The Backstab: Huawei looks to build Windows Phone 8 handset, Windows 8 tablet China's smartphone market is twice the size of U.S. and crucial to Nokia's comeback but the rug has been pulled from under Nokia. The Death Blow: Microsoft may be making own phone, says analyst Once MS starts making its own phone, all other WP manufacturers will have to get out. They can't very well compete with the maker of the OS. Hence MS will be following Apple's model of one company controlling both hardware and OS. |
Re: Odd reply from Stephen Elop
Sounds like a drunk prostitute.
The kick (to the groin). The betrayal (by taking money upfront). The backstab (with a knife). The Death Blow (I'll let you ponder that one). I'm just surprised he was able to get Elop's email. Care to PM it to me? |
Re: Odd reply from Stephen Elop
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Re: Odd reply from Stephen Elop
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Tell me one single action by him that has raised Nokia's market value? I bet you find it hard to find any. Now how about actions that have brought the share value down? Too many to count. Or actions to kill platforms that are direct competitors with Microsoft? Sorry, but I find it - from day one of the partnership -, that Nokia is in bed with Microsoft against it's own interests. BoD seems like bunch of ignorants dancing by MS tune into eventual downfall of Nokia. They seem to have no clue about realities of the industry and where the trends lay. Instead of listening to current and potential customers, they listen to MS shills whispering to their ears comfortable lies about how WP whatever will save Nokia. Microsoft simply couldn't afford letting Intel and Nokia push Linux to mobile and embedded space at full force. In face of such competition they had to act and that action was coinvincing US shareholders and Nokia BoD to hire Elop instead of originally planned Vanjoki (who favored Linux as the future platform for Nokia). Maybe I am wrong, but atleast in the light of all evidence, it makes more sense than thinking that Elop is just stupid and has no bias towards MS platform. @Nokia: Either way, I got my N9 and it rocks. Thank you Nokia. As you've got no more of that coming, please fu(k off. |
Re: Odd reply from Stephen Elop
I think instead of involving Lumia, Nokia should put pure view in Meego, to avenge mircosoft of their betrayal and to promote Meego. Meego is the best executive OS in market with plenty of competence. Think Nokia think........
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Re: Odd reply from Stephen Elop
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Re: Odd reply from Stephen Elop
#16 Ladoga=
Makes complete sense to me. Explains why they drastically limited the availability of the N9. When it became evident that the N9 was becoming more widely available outside of their restrictions what else could they do but kill it off by ceasing production and support so soon. I don't own the N900 because it's a Nokia. I own it because of Maemo 5. I get the sense that it's MY phone, not Google's or Apple's or Microsoft's for that matter. If someone made a back cover and a bezel that didn't have Nokia carved into them and if someone found a way to delete all references to Nokia in the O/S I'd do it tomorrow. |
Re: Odd reply from Stephen Elop
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Elop is not stupid, but he is not a CEO with deep technological understanding and far reaching visions either. He is a thug, a slugger. He was hired to do exactly what he is doing. It's a big blow for him that Lumia didn't sell more than they did. You may call that stupid, but it was a calculated risk. If it didn't pay off, at least Nokia would be honed towards producing WP8 phones and as a bonus it could explore the lower end of the market with cheap WP7 phones. Lets be honest and objective, if they can manage to get WP7 in the Asha price range, they will sell like hot cakes. From an objective point of view, what has happened with Nokia can easily be explained by the simple fact that it was a company in free fall with no believe that their products could survive the competition. The fact that 75% of the company consisted of blubber didn't exactly help. |
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