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2009-08-12
, 21:18
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Posts: 4,384 |
Thanked: 5,524 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ ˙ǝɹǝɥʍou
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#92
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2009-08-12
, 21:26
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Posts: 2,535 |
Thanked: 6,681 times |
Joined on Mar 2008
@ UK
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#94
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hp seemed to think there was a large enough market for dedicated pda's to make the 110 and 210 series of products...
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2009-08-12
, 21:28
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Posts: 3,319 |
Thanked: 5,610 times |
Joined on Aug 2008
@ Finland
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#95
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@danramos: think there's a big enough market for a cellular-less tablet to sustain its lifecycle on its own?
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2009-08-12
, 21:43
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Posts: 4,672 |
Thanked: 5,455 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Springfield, MA, USA
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#96
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Everyone has a price that they think something is worth; and they shouldn't pay any more for something than that.
If the HSPA capability is useless to you, ignore it. Evaluate the device on everything which does matter to you and see if it's worth the asking price. If not, shrug your shoulders and move on. If you're "right" (in the sense of the market), Nokia'll learn and adapt to meet the market requirements.
If the price point - when it's known - is too high for the features you want, buy another device such as a SmartQ 5 or a new, discount, N810.
From what I can see, RX-51 is going to outsell any individual previous tablet model - and, if we're really lucky as a community - it'll outsell all the previous tablet models combined.
This'll have two advantages:
- Volume means reduced costs (although by sharing components with phones, Nokia are already leveraging one aspect of their business to the benefit of another).
- More users means more developers means more apps means more users means more developers... which means I can do more with my Maemo device than I can now.
The Following User Says Thank You to danramos For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-08-12
, 21:55
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Posts: 5,478 |
Thanked: 5,222 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ St. Petersburg, FL
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#97
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Not some OTHER device I didn't want. It's a tad hard to 'ignore what you don't need' when it's boosted up the price enough to almost buy two of the previous generation.
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2009-08-12
, 22:01
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Posts: 2,535 |
Thanked: 6,681 times |
Joined on Mar 2008
@ UK
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#98
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I bought into an N800 because it's exactly what I need and want. What I'd like to buy into is the next generation of what I need and want--a faster and more capable version of that device.
Then there's the previous generation. I didn't see fit to go from the N800 to the N810--but if I don't like this painfully expensive appendix I'd rather not have to pay for, you want me to just buy an N810?
Is it so hard for Nokia to actually make the offending radio a seperate module you could insert into the back like the SD cards do now--you could go out and buy your supposedly $15-$25 radio, if you so chose.. and the rest of us could happily have the same device we invested into all along the way to this point.
Near a I can tell, this thing isn't a tablet.. it's a smartphone. Call it what it is. Stop pretending it's in the same field as a general purpose device like a MID or the previous tablets.
By that token, I'm still disappointed that Nokia hasn't released a new tablet that I can upgrade from my N800 to. (Sorry.. but N800 to N810 isn't an upgrade.)
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2009-08-12
, 22:36
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Posts: 61 |
Thanked: 30 times |
Joined on Aug 2009
@ Madrid, Spain
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#99
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2009-08-12
, 22:41
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Posts: 61 |
Thanked: 30 times |
Joined on Aug 2009
@ Madrid, Spain
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#100
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If the HSPA capability is useless to you, ignore it. Evaluate the device on everything which does matter to you and see if it's worth the asking price. If not, shrug your shoulders and move on. If you're "right" (in the sense of the market), Nokia'll learn and adapt to meet the market requirements.
If the price point - when it's known - is too high for the features you want, buy another device such as a SmartQ 5 or a new, discount, N810.
From what I can see, RX-51 is going to outsell any individual previous tablet model - and, if we're really lucky as a community - it'll outsell all the previous tablet models combined.
This'll have two advantages:
Andrew Flegg -- mailto:andrew@bleb.org | http://www.bleb.org