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2009-12-10
, 14:19
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Posts: 219 |
Thanked: 94 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ Helsinki, Finland
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#61
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2009-12-10
, 14:26
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Posts: 289 |
Thanked: 560 times |
Joined on May 2009
@ Tampere, Finland
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#62
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The Following User Says Thank You to jsa For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-12-10
, 14:42
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Posts: 20 |
Thanked: 3 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#63
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The Following User Says Thank You to Netjer For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-12-10
, 14:45
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Posts: 287 |
Thanked: 127 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Sweden
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#64
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Apple sold 1/100th (1%) of the total number of devices then Nokia did last year. With those 1% they made money while Nokia lost. It is PROFITABILITY that matters and not dominance.
The Following User Says Thank You to floffe For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-12-10
, 14:49
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#65
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2009-12-10
, 16:46
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Posts: 1,589 |
Thanked: 720 times |
Joined on Aug 2009
@ Arlington (DFW), Texas
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#66
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"Most other manufacturers market to a far greater market than Apple. So Apple wins in the small high end segment, but fails everywhere else. It's an Audi vs. Toyota argument, and we know which dominates the auto market."
Yes, do one thing and do it well. It is called specialization. Seems to make tons of $$$ for Apple.
Apple sold 1/100th (1%) of the total number of devices then Nokia did last year. With those 1% they made money while Nokia lost.
Nokia will soon realize that it can't be everywhere for everyone. It'd better pick a nieche market (like the N900 users) and market the hell out of it. That's what Apple did with the iPhone and it made them superstars.
In North America Nokia is considered...well...nothing. People still remember the cheap Nokia devices of the 90s. Noone I know here owns a Nokia (beside me). And I know a quite a few people.
Again, Nokia needs to focus on North America. And I don't mean having a flagship store in NYC. It is making deals with operators, like Apple did. Listen to what NA users want.
Also, you can't sell anything with a name like 'N900' in NA. Simple fact of life.
Someone in this thread posted an argument about the N95 being a good phone. That's what I've had just until recently. And guess what. That was the only phone that I could not synch with my car nav, because Nokia gives sh.t about NA made cars. Its BT stack is horrendous. I was the target of laughs .with my $700 N95 that couldn't synch with my car while the cheapest Motorola, BB pearl, Sony-ericcsons could.
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2009-12-10
, 16:56
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Posts: 3,159 |
Thanked: 2,023 times |
Joined on Feb 2008
@ Finland
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#67
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"apple hasn't payed royalities to patent owners and if it has, those have been 2/3 compared to competitors (with subcontracting mindtricks) "
Ah, yes I guess you refer to Nokia recently suing Apple for 10 infringed patents in GSM technology? Or Nokia suing the LCD makers for price fixing?
Do some googling and discover who sued Nokia for what and how much money Nokia ended up paying.
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2009-12-10
, 17:05
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Posts: 220 |
Thanked: 129 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#68
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Let me explain...If we take an N900 with a hypothetical $500 price and compare the hardware internals of an identically priced laptop, it is clear that the N900 should cost about $150-200.
And no, I don't believe that the 3.5 inch touch screen costs more than a 17 inch non-touch, or a 32GB flash costs more than a 500GB HD, or Maemo with Nokia customizations costs more than Windows 7, or the GSM/HSPA radio costs more than 802.11n. If you follow this line of reasoning you come to the conclusion that the N900 (and the iPhone and the BB and the Droid and all other smart phones) are a total rip-off price-wise.
Any counter arguments?
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2009-12-10
, 17:12
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Posts: 6 |
Thanked: 13 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#69
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I disagree with many of the above posters for the following reasons:
1. Times have changed. It took only two years for a totally new entrant to the smartphone market to shook it up.
Yes, it is Apple, the arch-enemy of every major smartphone maker. It was a bankrupt company and now it could buy Nokia twice over.
It is time for Nokia to take some tricks out of the Apple playbook.
2. Ignoring North America is a HUGE mistake. Nokia cannot possibly leave such a lucrative market out of its strategic planning.
Since we've established that the profit on the N900 is very high, what prevents Nokia from dropping the bomb in NA and selling
the N900 for $250? It would still make profit for sure. Imagine the reaction of people here: wow, gee, look at this awesome cool
device. It only costs $250 without contract. Nokia could sell 1 million N900 in a month.
3. And I disagree with a previous poster's argument that the goal is not to sell many devices, but less at a higher profit margin.
While Appple seems to be doing it successfully - for now it will have to adapt its strategy too. Ultimately as the sector moves
away from the selling-hardware model towards the service-oriented approach (like Ovi or the App store) it is clear that
to gain marketshare in the services one needs to produce an inexpensive platform. Just watch Google. It will come out with its
own phone, then drop its price ridiculously, then eventually it's gonna be for free.
4. While I truly wish for Nokia's global success I don't think that the N900 will be a popular device for the masses. How sad it is.
Maybe the upcoming N9x0? There is simply no time to play catch-up anymore. Com'on Nokia, step ap the ante and use your massive
global talent pool and come out with something truly revolutionary.
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2009-12-10
, 17:26
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Banned |
Posts: 291 |
Thanked: 42 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#70
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Tags |
ego wars, what was the topic again?, zealots unite, zealots v. zealots |
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