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2012-05-28
, 16:35
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Posts: 1,309 |
Thanked: 1,187 times |
Joined on Nov 2008
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#1342
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2012-05-28
, 16:50
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Posts: 207 |
Thanked: 552 times |
Joined on Jul 2011
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#1343
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Elop and his management team have done so much wrong things that you don't need to pull fictional data or conspiracy theories in order to plainly show their incompetence.
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2012-05-28
, 18:18
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Posts: 840 |
Thanked: 823 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#1344
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At the time he announced NOKIA would be abandoning their own operating systems and adopting Microsoft's he was still a very significant shareholder in M$, seventh largest in the world if I remember correctly. It was only when awkward questions started being asked about a conflict of interests he 'sold' his M$ shares.
What's the betting when Elop's finished killing off NOKIA and returns to M$ with NOKIA's IPR Ballmer will gift him back the shares he 'sold' and more besides?
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2012-05-28
, 20:59
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Posts: 207 |
Thanked: 552 times |
Joined on Jul 2011
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#1345
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That's not true.
He was selling them but once the deal was announced he was prohibited to sell or buy Nokia or MS shares because of regulations.
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2012-05-29
, 03:12
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Posts: 840 |
Thanked: 823 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#1346
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Are you saying it isn't true or that it is true but he couldn't help it?
I could see why he wouldn't want to buy NOKIA shares knowing what he was about to do, as the FT reported at the time:
Investors seemed to agree with Pierre Ferragu, analyst at Bernstein, when he said: "It is hard to see any negatives in the deal for Microsoft, and it is hard to see any positives in the deal for Nokia."
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/87a050ce-3...#axzz1wCQ9wIbS
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2012-05-29
, 05:39
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Posts: 94 |
Thanked: 59 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
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#1347
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2012-05-29
, 07:12
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Posts: 187 |
Thanked: 143 times |
Joined on Nov 2011
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#1348
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2012-05-29
, 07:55
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Posts: n/a |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on
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#1349
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I'm sure this has been said before, but i'm worried just how Nokia is going to be able to further itself as a brand and company, given the fact it no longer has it's own OS
Nokia has always been known for innovating - and that's why i've always had so much respect for Nokia
The N9 was an innovation with Swipe - something that was an excellent idea, and should be used on ALL touchscreen phones
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2012-05-29
, 08:07
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Posts: 187 |
Thanked: 143 times |
Joined on Nov 2011
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#1350
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My time in Africa or Europe... I'd say otherwise. They've been known for reliability. Something that Maemo, MeeGo and now WP7 just do not deliver. Not saying Symbian delivers it either, but other historical phones from Nokia are still in use by folks that have no reason yet to upgrade or do not have the means to do so.
Tags |
goodbye nokia, investing, last quotes, lumiatard, samsung, specc=ericsson, stock, the elop flop, the flop elop, tizen |
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It seems to me though that WP7 only is a stop gap solution to WP8. Not to say WP8 will be better. Judging by Windows 8 I don't have high hopes for WP8. But even so, if this is true it explains why Elop is still CEO, and it explains why Nokia would go for WP.
If they succeed, the upside will be extreme, the price could tenfolds in a year or two. They need only to do one single thing:
Make a killer of a phone with PureView running WP8. WP8 have to be void of the nonsense limitations of WP7 though, it has to be similar to Symbian in functionality. There is no doubt in my mind that Nokia is more than capable of making such a phone, but is MS capable of making such an OS?