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Re: Let's talk Nokia stock!
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good. Its like a pretty painting in a crappy frame. Elop quickly realized that Nokia doesn't have it. The board realized Nokia doesn't have it. Its not in their DNA to make a software that can compete with Android and iPhone. Seven years is a century these days. I am curious to see what pr1.3 brings. |
Re: Let's talk Nokia stock!
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Sorry couldn't resist, just couldn't. |
Re: Let's talk Nokia stock!
Lumiaman, why are you spamming this forum, seriously? Do you really think anybody's buying your nonsense, especially that we (Harmattan fans), unlike you, have serious matters to attend to, both here and in real life?
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Re: Let's talk Nokia stock!
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Re: Let's talk Nokia stock!
That Wired article is off, quite a bit in a few areas. Criticizing Nokia for not going to WP7 sooner in response to the 2007 iPhone release, and I quote:
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Nokia has not been able to do that yet. Their internals are dictated by Microsoft. That could be a blessing in disguise right now (wonder if they'd pair an OMAP3 to WP7) but it's a hindrance in setting themselves different. And the external case being different isn't always enough. Nokia was complacent from 2002 - 2008, imho. Buying Qt was their initial response but that took a long time to bear fruit. Well... Elop killed that momentum with that burning platform memo. Belle, PureView were already in the wings. He should have just said nothing. All that WP7 has done for Nokia was get sales in North America where they had not had carrier or store presence besides cheap flip phones in ages. They could have stayed with Symbian in all other areas - Asia, Africa and Europe. That article is... just a bit off. Mention(s) of Maemo were also lacking. Symbian was old hat - I'll never purchase one - true... but Maemo wasn't. They just didn't know how to market that beyond us geeks here at TMO. |
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That being said, WP SDK was finished on September 16, Elop became a Nokia CEO 5 days later. He couldn't send the `burning platform` memo the first day he arrived, he would be kicked out right away even if the BoD wanted him to gut Nokia. It took some months to prepare the stage and strangle the opposition before his coup de grāce. With hindsight, I am totally convinced that it was his intention to turn Nokia into a MS subsidiary from the day one - no other logical explanation for some of the moves he made, especially the cancellation of S^4, reclamation of the Symbian Foundation (he couldn't pass them to Accenture without first owning them, nor he could completely kill the S^4 plan without it), returning the dubbed 'first MeeGo device' to the drawing board... Oh, well, since we're talking here about the stock price, and the stock price being one of the best measures of a CEO performance in a publicly owned company - the performance of Elop is downright criminal. It has nothing to do with what system they've chosen to go with, I hypothesized they'd be going the way of the dodo even if they chose Android instead of WP, with the same execution. Elop was brought in to fix exactly that - execution. And 'fix' it he did - he executed Nokia quite expertly. Bravo, sir! |
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Given the history between the two companies I doubt NOKIA will be a Qualcomm priority either. |
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