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Posts: 4,672 | Thanked: 5,455 times | Joined on Jul 2008 @ Springfield, MA, USA
#25
Originally Posted by rmerren View Post
What a freaking dufus. I don't know what problem Nokia has that he thinks using WP7 or Android will solve. Nobody disputes that Nokia has plenty of work to do to win back market share in the USA. But there is no other company that sells as many handsets as they do, and no other company that sells as many smartphones as they do.

Android is not a company and Google does not sell android phones (well...they branded one a while back). It would be fair to compare Nokia to Samsung. Samsung makes some of the coolest Android devices out there. They are doing very well. But they still haven't outsold Nokia. Nokia claims 28.3 million smartphone sales in Q4. Even a conservative extrapolation out to a full year gives them sales of around 100 million smartphones a year. And that is without the US market contributing much. Samsung says they sold around 20 million smartphones last year, and they hope to sell 60 million smartphones next year. Perhaps they will far exceed that expectation and quadruple their last year sales and sell 80 million. Wildly exceeding their own expectations would still leave them far short of what Nokia is selling. So why should Nokia, who is beating them in market share, emulate them?

I don't know if Nokia will get it right with meego...I think they dropped the ball with maemo and never let it live up to its full potential. But if meego follows the same design principals as Linux generally does, they give themselves a great base to work from where the OS guys get to worry about implementing the hardware and drivers and the user experience guys get to build on top of that in a fairly generic way with a bunch of standard libraries. And hardware manufacturers (like the ones who make the compass chips and the Near Field Communications chips) can make linux drivers that should be extremely similar or the same for android phones or meego phones. I wouldn't be surprised if, a year or two from now, we start seeing Davlik, Symbian, and possibly WebOs implemented as a UX layer on top of meego.

And to top it off, Nokia does pretty much the opposite of what this article is saying in switching from maemo to meego. Instead of having an in-house, Nokia-only linux implementation that they are working on, they have shifted it out-of-house, shared the burden with Intel, and opened it up to a wider set of implementers who will (hopefully) contribute back to its development.

I hope Nokia doesn't listen to this guy. I really want to see the positive things we have in maemo expanded upon in newer phones. N900, for all of its faults and for all of Nokia's missteps with it, is a major step forward in putting power and flexibility in the hands of users. Moving to a tightly controlled app-based environment like Android or WP7 would be a step backwards.
Although I would like to agree that Nokia should press ahead with what they're doing (especially, hopefully, MeeGo), I'm far less religious about it than you are. From my more pragmatic position, I see Nokia as selling far more cell phones but they have been far surpassed as a platform. That's where Google's Android operating system is now the leader.

Google might not sell devices (for the record, they've Google branded MANY devices as far back as the T-Mobile G1 which clearly says GOOGLE across the back and was used as a reference device... even my Droid says GOOGLE across the back and it was sold as a Google blessed handset unlike most of the newer Droids) but they have certainly far outsold Nokia as a mobile platform the world over. Your argument holds up about as well as the old Microsoft stodges trying to sell Windows servers with the claim that Windows is the best OS in the world for servers because it outsells Linux, a free OS that anybody could get. Just because there were many vendors selling a free OS with varying distributions didn't make Linux any more inferior or take over any less in the server market.

For that matter, you should probably hold off puffering up Nokia too much. They seem to be losing more and more bragging rights lately. Instead, suggest something constructive or listen to somebody else's suggestions. The status quo and stagnation won't keep them at the top of any statistic for very much longer. The point of my earlier posting was that the guy's suggestions aren't worth a grain of salt of wisdom for all the inaccuracies and misconceptions he cited--an instant turn-off. Your puffery isn't making your counter-proposals any more credible.
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Nokia's slogan shouldn't be the pedo-palmgrabbing image with the slogan, "Connecting People"... It should be one hand open pleadingly with another hand giving the middle finger and the more apt slogan, "Potential Unrealized." --DR
 

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