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#1881
Originally Posted by switch-hitter View Post
Why would anyone assume WP8 is going to be a success anyway? Wasn't Mango supposed to be a game changer before that came out? It's always the next iteration that's going to change everything isn't it?

And let's face it in the unlikely circumstance WP8 does become a success in 2013 Samsung will just ramp up their production of WP8 devices. By that time NOKIA will be so small comparatively they simply will not be able to compete with Samsung's economies of scale.

Anybody that says NOKIA didn't have an option except to walk this path only has to look at Samsung to know that's not true. You only have to go back to early 2010 and, in terms of smartphone sales, Samsung were smaller than HTC never mind NOKIA. Now look at them towering above NOKIA who were by far the biggest back then. Samsung are announcing a record breaking quarter whilst NOKIA crash and burn. NOKIA painted themselves into a corner whilst Samsung kept all options open.

Exclusively adopting a low-functioning OS that had already proven to be a failure for at least three other major manufacturers was never likely to be a winning strategy and NOKIA's resulting crash is not the least bit surprising.

There's very little NOKIA can do to turn it around either now, their hardware is still good but they've lumbered themselves with an OS that most people just don't seem to want.
True, but there has been written lots and lots about WP7 vs WP8. I don't have the sources here right now, but in essence it's like this: Almost immediately after the launch of WP7 the development of the OS stagnated. Lots of smaller improvements have come, but none that truly fixes the core problems of the OS. Those problems are tied to the lack of security in CE, and cannot be fixed without a complete redo of the entire OS. That redo would result in a NT type of OS, so the answer was given - use NT instead. So the focus shifted from WP7 to WP8 almost immediately after the launch and increased in power when Nokia came.

But WP8 was far into the future when Nokia came. Way too far for Nokia to wait. So they decided to use WP7 as a stop gap, and to build up and strengthen the ecosystem throughout the entire world. The Lumia series hasn't exactly been a success, but the ecosystem-building has. Everything is ready for the launch of WP8. Services in all parts of the world and 100k apps, and everything in time for Windows 8 and the Surface.

Samsung will go at it with full power, that's true, but it is also a big advantage for both MS and Nokia. But Samsung is not that strong. What Samsung got is the Galaxy S3, they got nothing else, nada. Nokia got PureView, and it scares the **** out of anyone.
 
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#1882
Originally Posted by specc View Post
True, but there has been written lots and lots about WP7 vs WP8. I don't have the sources here right now, but in essence it's like this: Almost immediately after the launch of WP7 the development of the OS stagnated. Lots of smaller improvements have come, but none that truly fixes the core problems of the OS. Those problems are tied to the lack of security in CE, and cannot be fixed without a complete redo of the entire OS. That redo would result in a NT type of OS, so the answer was given - use NT instead. So the focus shifted from WP7 to WP8 almost immediately after the launch and increased in power when Nokia came.

But WP8 was far into the future when Nokia came. Way too far for Nokia to wait. So they decided to use WP7 as a stop gap, and to build up and strengthen the ecosystem throughout the entire world. The Lumia series hasn't exactly been a success, but the ecosystem-building has. Everything is ready for the launch of WP8. Services in all parts of the world and 100k apps, and everything in time for Windows 8 and the Surface.

Samsung will go at it with full power, that's true, but it is also a big advantage for both MS and Nokia. But Samsung is not that strong. What Samsung got is the Galaxy S3, they got nothing else, nada. Nokia got PureView, and it scares the **** out of anyone.
Can you please point out where you're getting these impressions, statistics and "facts" that you keep throwing at us without any consideration to citing sources/stats? I'm pretty certain your earlier '95%' statistic was made up... and now you're saying PureView scares "anyone" but you won't point out any source for these claims. I'm not getting the impression that anyone is scared--based on the general LACK of news and chatter around it, I get the impression that most barely know about the PureView. Please show us where you're getting these impressions, since they seem to run counter to the opinions and citations throughout this thread.
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#1883
Originally Posted by specc View Post
Samsung will go at it with full power, that's true, but it is also a big advantage for both MS and Nokia. But Samsung is not that strong. What Samsung got is the Galaxy S3, they got nothing else, nada. Nokia got PureView, and it scares the **** out of anyone.
You are completely delusional, Samsung have a Nexus, they dominate the mid-price high-end market with the S2 which still sells better than all Windows phone combined yet alone Nokias, they dominate the ultra low market with their lower Android Brightside/Galaxy Y/Ace and on top of that they sell BADA phones which also outsell all windows phones. According to Nielsen Samsung even top Nokia in WP sales in the US. The market Nokia seems so fixated on.

Just look at the best selling list here and tell me you're still serious.

http://wireless.amazon.com/
http://www.amazon.co.uk/s?ie=UTF8&node=356496011
 
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Posts: 7,075 | Thanked: 9,073 times | Joined on Oct 2009 @ Moon! It's not the East or the West side... it's the Dark Side
#1884
Good news for nokia. The stock is on the move since the Q was not as bad as expected YEAH!

http://www.nokia.com/global/about-no...lts---reports/
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I don't trust poeple without a Nokia n900...

Last edited by Dave999; 2012-07-19 at 11:50.
 
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#1885
... it still is almost -20% this month, and -50.4% this year... Not so rosy if you ask me.
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#1886
Originally Posted by zwer View Post
... it still is almost -20% this month, and -50.4% this year... Not so rosy if you ask me.
read the report. Sure the pst is not good, but you can't do anything abut it so look ahead!

878 Million Eur in lose and the cheaper prices on lumia saved the sales. still 300 Million Eur worst the Q2 2011
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Posts: 322 | Thanked: 218 times | Joined on Feb 2012
#1887
Originally Posted by danramos View Post
Can you please point out where you're getting these impressions, statistics and "facts" that you keep throwing at us without any consideration to citing sources/stats? I'm pretty certain your earlier '95%' statistic was made up... and now you're saying PureView scares "anyone" but you won't point out any source for these claims. I'm not getting the impression that anyone is scared--based on the general LACK of news and chatter around it, I get the impression that most barely know about the PureView. Please show us where you're getting these impressions, since they seem to run counter to the opinions and citations throughout this thread.
Try to read something else than US tech blogs. They all point to the same origin anyway, namely Engadget, and or just repeat over and over what the others are saying. But I'm sorry, I don't keep track of everything I read.

But this whole tread, Nokia stock and everything you make out of it, it is so far away from reality you just wouldn't understand. Nokia can function just fine without the stock market, if you believe otherwise you are disillusioned to the point of it's not even funny. Moling, paraciting, whatever. It's childrens play. Nothing here can be taken seriously.

Google can translate, try it. broaden your mind.
 
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#1888
The Nokia Q2 filing is out here if anyone wants to take a look at it - http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/da...-16669_16k.htm

The standout points for me are.

1. All the discussion on smartphones is towards the Windows Phone platform.
2. Symbian sales are apparently "down sharply".
3. There is almost no mention whatsoever about Meego, or the N9, excluding a reference to the canned facility in Ulm pushing R&D costs down.
4. Lumia SHIPPED (correction) 4 million devices for the quarter, whereas total smartphone sales were 10 million devices.
5. The small increase in Windows Phone sales isn't off-setting the collapse in Symbian/Meego smartphone sales.

My inference from the whole report was that Nokia really going to push the coming Windows Phone 8 devices when they get released towards the end of this year. Q4 is going to be make of break for Nokia in that respect. All the eggs are in the Windows Phone basket, and if users don't adopt the Windows Phone 8 platform, then Nokia are going to be in serious trouble.

Last edited by NokiaFanatic; 2012-07-19 at 14:34.
 
Posts: 648 | Thanked: 650 times | Joined on Oct 2011
#1889
Please note, it is NOT 4 million Lumia sales, it is 4 million Lumia SHIPPED.

Source: http://www.results.nokia.com/results...lts2012Q2e.pdf

On the first page,
Commenting on the Q2 results, Stephen Elop, Nokia CEO, said:

"We shipped four million Lumia Smartphones in Q2,and ..."

Units shipped does not mean units sold so Elop is being very cagey. Units shipped include unsold units, returned units, freebie units like those given to all AT&T employees, bloggers, ball carriers, reviewers and developers.

For U.S. sales Elop is being even more cagey. He says 600,000 units of all devices shipped for N. America. This include dumb phones, Symbian phones, returned units, freebies and covers Canada and Mexico.

If the figures are good why so cagey? My generous estimate is 300,000 Lumia shipped in U.S. and after deducting return units (Lumia 900 has a super-high rate of return with many buyers exchanging their phones 2-3 times) a pathetic figure of only 150,000 Lumia in users' hands.
 
Posts: 322 | Thanked: 218 times | Joined on Feb 2012
#1890
Originally Posted by NokiaFanatic View Post
The Nokia Q2 filing is out here if anyone wants to take a look at it - http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/da...-16669_16k.htm

The standout points for me are.

1. All the discussion on smartphones is towards the Windows Phone platform.
2. Symbian sales are apparently "down sharply".
3. There is almost no mention whatsoever about Meego, or the N9, excluding a reference to the canned facility in Ulm pushing R&D costs down.
4. Lumia sales were 4 million devices for the quarter, whereas total smartphone sales were 10 million devices.
5. The small increase in Windows Phone sales isn't off-setting the collapse in Symbian/Meego smartphone sales.

My inference from the whole report was that Nokia really going to push the coming Windows Phone 8 devices when they get released towards the end of this year. Q4 is going to be make of break for Nokia in that respect. All the eggs are in the Windows Phone basket, and if users don't adopt the Windows Phone 8 platform, then Nokia are going to be in serious trouble.
Cool. Not all bad news this time. More here:
http://allaboutwindowsphone.com/news...ued_losses.php

4 million Lumias is not bad (more than 6 in total now). It means WP8 will have a much easier start than one could expect. It's going in the right direction
 
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