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2013-11-20
, 16:36
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#2212
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2013-11-20
, 19:39
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Posts: 289 |
Thanked: 185 times |
Joined on Sep 2012
@ Worldwide
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#2213
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2013-11-21
, 11:26
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Posts: 1,789 |
Thanked: 1,699 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
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#2214
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You got no vision bud......long term strategy is not always tied to profits
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2013-11-21
, 12:12
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#2215
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2013-11-21
, 12:21
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Posts: 131 |
Thanked: 62 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
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#2216
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2013-11-21
, 12:30
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#2217
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You're an idiot Lumiaman.
Analyst estimate from 2011 - midway through Elops destruction of Nokia Mobile.
"Here’s a quick sum-of-the-parts analysis. After yesterday’s hair cut Nokia’s overall enterprise value is about $20 billion. The Navteq part of the business (purchased for $8.1 billion in 2008) could get a value of $3 billion (based on about 3x sales) and the value of Nokia Siemens networks could be at $6b (less than 0.5x sales). That makes Nokia’s phone business worth about $11 billion."
That would mean before Elop the Mobile division would have been worth more than that.
Before Elop they could have created a seamless migration strategy for all Symbian customers to an Android device or equivalent - QT migration path for apps for instance and retained all customers and achieved a far far greater return than where they are today with a paltry $7b.
The $7b today is the losers prize.
rgds
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2013-11-21
, 16:01
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Posts: 362 |
Thanked: 143 times |
Joined on Mar 2008
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#2218
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When Elop arrived, no one would have bought NOKIA mobile division. Everyone was shedding Symbian and going elsewhere.
So you are an idiot to think that NOKIA mobile division at the time Elop took over was worth anything. It was worth exactly 0, as no one had interest to buy antiquated NOKIA
Not only are u an idiot, but you are stupid too.
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2013-11-21
, 16:04
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#2219
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wow...nice logic. By all accounts, people were moving away from Symbian Before Elop's arrival; however, it was Mr. Elop's handy work to kill it off - full stop. The mobile division WAS still making money - it was only making less before Elop's takeover.
Did Elop make a smart move? Yeah right.... Nokia ended up with NOTHING in the highend(super duper smartphone, costing tonnes of money), NOTHING in mid-range(able to do some nice stuff; but I don't have a 'money-tree') , and NOTHING in the low/bottom of the line(I just want a f##king phone, period, i want it cheap) stuff.
Did you check the Nokia's balance sheets for those years? By the way, NOIKA mobile division was a FEW times larger(in terms of valuation) than the raising APPLE(and its new and shinny iStuff) at the time -- BEFORE Mr. Elop's "oversights".
So, Mr. Elop took a healthy division and turned it to a dump(and taking the entire company with it).
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2013-11-21
, 16:04
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Posts: 131 |
Thanked: 62 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
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#2220
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Tags |
bring me beer, downward spiral, elop is nero, let's talk bs, lumiadickweed, lumiatard, nero fiddling, nokia bears, nokiastockrock, thanks for asha |
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Let's see how this affects everything going forwards if not resolved quickly.