zimon
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2012-06-26
, 20:06
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Posts: 1,341 |
Thanked: 708 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
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#241
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2012-06-27
, 22:18
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Posts: 1,341 |
Thanked: 708 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
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#242
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Meltemi release would mean that Microsoft would have no sales at all in 2013 in the budget smartphone range. Look for yourself at a probable Meltemi phone: 800x480 3.5” -4” screen, 5MPix camera, a good chassis, high performance and for just 120-130 euro. It would be a bombshell on the market that could mean that Nokia is coming back. I am pretty sure Meltemi would have been successful and would would be happening this summer.
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2012-06-27
, 22:54
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Guest |
Posts: n/a |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on
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#243
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http://www.mobile-review.com/article...176-en.shtml#2
Why Meltemi was murdered.
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2012-06-28
, 04:28
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Posts: 650 |
Thanked: 619 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#244
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2012-06-30
, 16:41
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Posts: 207 |
Thanked: 552 times |
Joined on Jul 2011
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#245
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Eldar is clueless. It was killed for less sinister, but more realistic reasons.
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2012-07-26
, 10:40
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Posts: 337 |
Thanked: 891 times |
Joined on Jul 2012
@ Royaume Uni.
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#246
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(Reuters) - Struggling Finnish cellphone maker Nokia has scrapped a software project which it had hoped would compete with mass-market Google Android phones, three sources with direct knowledge of the company's plans said.
Nokia was hoping the Linux-based software platform, code-named Meltemi, would replace its ageing Series 40 software in more advanced feature phones, but has killed the project as part of its massive cost-cutting drive.
Scrapping the platform means loss-making Nokia will risk losing its strong position in the mass-market -- where phones are priced at $100-$200. Nokia controlled more than 20 percent of this market in the first quarter, according to research firm IDC.
Nokia's Chief Executive Stephen Elop flagged Meltemi in a leaked video in mid-2011, but Nokia has never officially confirmed Meltemi existed. It declined to comment on Thursday.
In June, Nokia said it would cut 10,000 jobs - one in five staff in its phone business - as it aims to pull the company out of the red. Talks over job cuts are scheduled to end this week in Finland.
One of the sources, who works at a supplier, said the original plan was for the first feature phones using Meltemi should to be on the market by now.
Smartphones such as Apple's iPhone which offer a platform for third-party application developers, is where the industry's strongest growth is. But simpler feature phones, with limited support for third-party software, still account for most units sold.
Nokia's Series 40 platform are in around 2 billion cellphones, making it the most ubiquitous software in the market. But it lacks the smartphone-like experience Meltemi could have offered.
Google's Android platform has stormed the smartphone market in its first few years. Last quarter it was used in roughly 60 percent of all smartphones sold.
Nokia last year dumped its own smartphone software platforms in favor of Microsoft's Windows Phone, which has so far had a limited impact, in part due to the high prices of phones using it.
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2012-07-26
, 10:46
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Posts: 1,225 |
Thanked: 1,905 times |
Joined on Feb 2011
@ Quezon City, Philippines
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#247
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To me, it seems pretty clear that Nokia see their future as using Series 40 running Qt for the budget/mid-range market, and Windows Phone for the high-end, feature phone market. Qt will be the key bridge that enables developers to easily move between the unsupported platforms and Series 40.
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2012-07-26
, 11:02
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Moderator |
Posts: 5,320 |
Thanked: 4,464 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#248
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Meltemi is being canned according to Reuters - http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/...86P0CD20120726
So what is the future for Nokia? It certainly won't involve Meltemi and I can't see any further progress with Meego, considering that the development team have jumped ship to Jolla.
To me, it seems pretty clear that Nokia see their future as using Series 40 running Qt for the budget/mid-range market, and Windows Phone for the high-end, feature phone market. Qt will be the key bridge that enables developers to easily move between the unsupported platforms and Series 40.
Is there any point in targeting S40 devices? Sure, Angry Birds and GLES2 low-poly shooterups on higher-end touchscreen devices, which will stop selling pretty soon.
Most S40 devices I see are touch-and-type low res devices with resistive screens and a crappy ARMv6 CPU. The browser and Facebook app both suck on it, and I doubt anyone would want to run any serious apps on it.
Most of the good Symbian stuff was made for S60, after all.
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2012-07-26
, 12:35
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Posts: 337 |
Thanked: 891 times |
Joined on Jul 2012
@ Royaume Uni.
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#250
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Tags |
deb & mitm, deb obsoleted, deb rox, dumbphones, linux, linuxmelting, meltemi, rpm sux |
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