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2009-11-27
, 05:20
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Posts: 474 |
Thanked: 283 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Oxford, UK
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#452
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I'm pretty sure nokia can easily afford to do it, the only problem is the lack of a monetary incentive to do it.
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2009-11-27
, 05:23
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Posts: 4,556 |
Thanked: 1,624 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#453
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The Following User Says Thank You to Laughing Man For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-11-27
, 05:29
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Posts: 77 |
Thanked: 160 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ T.M.O
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#454
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I'm thinking there's another equally significant aspect: They've not had to do it before. They ship hundreds of phone models, get them out the door, move on, fix critical bugs perhaps, help networks to customise the firmware, maintain thousands of custom firmware instances. That's how it's been with non-Maemo handsets.
So they're probably not set up for long term support and ongoing development of a single handset. Many people working there won't be doing things that way. There's a whole tradition, habit, culture, working practices thing.
And they ship so many new models. Apple at least only has 3 iPhone models to support. That's quite different form Nokia's hundreds at any one time.
It'll be interesting to see if the Maemo group in Nokia manages to change this to be more like the Apple long term support model. Maybe they will, maybe they won't.
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2009-11-27
, 05:35
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Posts: 226 |
Thanked: 63 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Maldives
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#455
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2009-11-27
, 05:42
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Posts: 607 |
Thanked: 450 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Washington, DC
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#456
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Correct. But what worked then.. wont necessarily work now. Plus I really don't think that we'll be seeing the same number of device variations like we currently see with s60 handsets.
Breaking off product support eventually is fine. But the current timeline nokia has is a wee bit short.
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2009-11-27
, 05:46
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Posts: 569 |
Thanked: 159 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ District of Columbia
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#457
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I don't think the point is flaming; Personally I get frustrated when I know Nokia can do better, but yet they keep doing the same sort-of-working-but-not-elegant cr@p. When you look at the iPhone's smooth scrolling, and then hear the n900 with the same hardware is all jerky and stuttery, how can that not tick you off? You know they COULD get it smooth, but because of schedules or whatever they didn't spend the time on it to perfect it.
And I think that's the problem. It seems like Apple doesn't release something until it's as perfect as possible. They don't even talk about stuff that is in the pipeline - the iPhone was only mentioned 5 months before rollout when for the most part the hardware and software was done. Nokia talks about the future devices way too early and they end up rushing everything to get it out as quickly as possible because everyone knows it's coming.
I think Nokia would be better served by NOT telling us what the roadmap is and releasing products after they're good and ready - They can't keep rushing everything to make some target that the marketers, and not the engineers, set.
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2009-11-27
, 05:48
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Posts: 77 |
Thanked: 160 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ T.M.O
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#458
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I would agree. But I don't hold out high hopes. After all, Nokia's main excuse for why the Diablo can't be upgraded to Fremantle was that the differences between OMAP 2 and OMAP 3 wouldn't allow it. And guess what? TI has announced OMAP 4.
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2009-11-27
, 05:49
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Posts: 4,556 |
Thanked: 1,624 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#459
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I would agree. But I don't hold out high hopes. After all, Nokia's main excuse for why the Diablo can't be upgraded to Fremantle was that the differences between OMAP 2 and OMAP 3 wouldn't allow it. And guess what? TI has announced OMAP 4.
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2009-11-27
, 12:41
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Posts: 81 |
Thanked: 44 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ Switzerland
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#460
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But if the features which are billed as the reason for buying the device do not work properly this is a major problem. And it should not be released if it does not work.as promised.
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close me please, cry me a river, delete me, old thread, worstthreadever |
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Try telling that to the US customers where all the high end phones by Nokia are off contract.. anyways what I was talking about was nokia's attitude towards software upgrades based on their history.
Just look at the new competitors, the iphone. palm pre, android devices. They all do get upgrades, with obviously some features missing depending on hardware limitations.
best eg. is the iphone where the platform is supported over different hardware platforms.
I'm pretty sure nokia can easily afford to do it, the only problem is the lack of a monetary incentive to do it. But still will keep my fingers crossed and hope for the best
Last edited by un-named_user; 2009-11-27 at 05:18.