What do you recommend? I sorta like what whatever you're taking and its results on you. Care to share? Then stop patting him on the back. Nothing's proven yet, so there's nothing to praise. It is that simple. And WP7 isn't selling any better. Nokia's partner hasn't quite improved their position, makes you wonder what's being brought to the table other than (as of yet) idle talk. Delivery of projects and with Ice Cream (Android) and iOS 5 both looming, it's going to take more than the rather hushed buzz surrounding Mango - and I know rather well, been running Mango for over a month here. Yep. But my initial deliverables were known to many before we got into deep beta/near finished. In a public facing, international company, it's going to take more than just saying "It's going to happen" because from February 2010 to now, still no MeeGo device released. From February 2011 to now, still no WP7 device released. And horribly staged leaks do not count (ex. Sea Ray) But not for announcements. Those have all been centered around Symbian thus far... you know, that OS they're slowly killing, the one sold off to Accenture... the one that has no future because WP7 will be their future. Yeah. Announcements != results, I'm sure of that. But to have nothing in place, they're having to utilize heavy sales of their dead OS to keep them afloat - well that and the hefty sums paid up by Apple for licensing. That's what you think, and you're allowed. But under Jormilla, Nokia was higher earning than they are now. Elop, OPK, Jormilla... they all suffered from lack of ability to coherently state, clarify and deliver. OPK "Maemo is our future..." - only delivered one Maemo device at a time... that made no sense. Meanwhile, Symbian continues to sell quite well on a multitude of phones. Their "future OS" isn't being utilized much at all. Elop "WP7 is our future, we'll invest less in Symbian..." - yet to deliver a WP7 phone or experience that wows a single person as of yet, thus no compelling reasons to buy WP7 as well as Symbian still continues to sell quite well on 1ghz Symbian phones. In both aforesaid situations, it's the lower cost stuff (Symbian) that's outselling whatever gamble the CEO has put forward as an option. And they're not put on many phones each time either - not until now that is - seems like WP7 might break that past issue. Simply stated, the CEO wants one thing, the people buy another. I fear this trend will continue. Let's just wait and see - that's what I think.