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2008-06-15
, 15:51
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Posts: 3,790 |
Thanked: 5,718 times |
Joined on Mar 2006
@ Vienna, Austria
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#72
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I can't but wonder if the intersection of those upset by Dr. Jaaksi's words and those who use Nvidia's binary drivers is non-empty.
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2008-06-15
, 15:57
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Posts: 243 |
Thanked: 172 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ silicon valley
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#73
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2008-06-15
, 16:49
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Posts: 4,783 |
Thanked: 1,253 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ norway
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#74
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2008-06-15
, 19:05
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Posts: 1,137 |
Thanked: 402 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ Catalunya
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#75
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I can't but wonder if the intersection of those upset by Dr. Jaaksi's words and those who use Nvidia's binary drivers is non-empty.
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2008-06-15
, 19:54
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Posts: 198 |
Thanked: 273 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ Helsinki, Finland
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#76
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2008-06-15
, 22:38
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Posts: 3,105 |
Thanked: 11,088 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ Mountain View (CA, USA)
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#77
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Just for the records: My original posting was not about what I think about Nokia and what I want you to do. - I tried to explain what I see going on around me and what I'd suggest as a possible way of correcting the public image. I do know how to get information about where and how Nokia contributed (although i have to admit I don't use these sources because I'm too lazy and I believe all of what you say anyway. Personal trust beats facts ). My suggestion was to do real marketing about it. Be loud. Make sure there's no way people can not hear it. It might be necessary because while I'm only too lazy, others might really not know the sources and are even more lazy.
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2008-06-16
, 00:38
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Posts: 77 |
Thanked: 41 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ Charlotte, NC
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#78
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2008-06-16
, 04:40
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#79
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As with any complex system, the answers are never simple or obvious unless you make simlifying and sometimes invalidating approximations.
There is absolutely no debate as to the way Nokia is moving currently (or has moved in the past).
However, the debatable thing is the direction they are pointing in for the future thrust. Ari's last several comments contain statements that indicate a mismatch between the direction Nokia's drifting vs. the direction it is pointing that is sending a few people into a panic
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2008-06-16
, 16:15
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Posts: 373 |
Thanked: 56 times |
Joined on Dec 2005
@ Ottawa, ON
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#80
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Just because the overarching issue is complex doesn't mean you can't boil the essence of it down to yes/no paths.
His statements indicate no such thing. Again, that's just an extreme kneejerk, paranoid interpretation (EDIT: that's a general assessment).
Just slightly off topic... well, not really, only adding an additional aspect:
I work for a public company with roughly 12000 employees and the biggest market share in my country. In terms of public perception, it's on the same level as Nokia here (the difference is that we are on the national market only, while Nokia operates worldwide).
Some time ago, our management decided to join the blogging scene and started to do corporate blogs very much the way Ari does except that comments were always filtered to avoid any kind of negative reaction.
About 6 months after they started it, one of the posts in our CEO's blog stirred a mild debate in the media about the way our company would handle a certain problem in the future. It was far from what we have here, no bad feelings, just a little irritation. (And, to be honest, it was probably the first time anyone noticed he ran a blog at all.)
The consequence was that a few days later they closed the blog, deleted all entries and re-directed the page to our corporate homepage. It never existed.
We discussed this decision inhouse a lot (afterwards, of course). Most of us said it was a shame. The explanation was: As a profit oriented company, we simply cannot risk having any other channel of communication than the official one. Whatever any of our representatives writes has to be checked and double-checked until in line with our official marketing campaigns (=read: until there's no more content at all).
Why do I tell you this? Because whenever we discuss this "is Nokia really serious about being open"-thing (and it's not the first time we do), I notice how open Ari's communication is. Comments remain where they are (did anyone else find the "you're an aHole"-comment extremely embarrassing? I'm ashamed that this is the image 'my' community paints of itself), he keeps on explaining and explaining to people who probably can't even afford an N-series product... Remember the end-of-770-fiasco, he was in a similar situation back then, back against the wall. But instead of hiding behind marketing phrases, he continues talking on an eye-to-eye level to his readers. This is one aspect of openness. Openness in communications. As long as we have this openness, I'm fairly confident that we can simply trust his team that at least they try to do The Right Thing™.
Last edited by benny1967; 2008-06-15 at 15:43.