droitwichgas
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2011-07-08
, 13:19
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Posts: 523 |
Thanked: 292 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#171
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2011-07-08
, 13:22
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Posts: 1,033 |
Thanked: 1,013 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#172
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I think your main probles is you are a hateful person and simply need to have someone to hate, or you think it makes you look cool, a real tem member of the TMO hate Elop faction, probably both.
I will take it slooow. Nokia makes hardware. Microsoft makes OS. Both are making services, all the pieces needed for for an ecosystem. Now they join to make a joint services system, an ecosystem owned and run by both companies. Still, MS makes the OS and Nokia makes HW. This ecosystem is available for the entire mobile industry. This is fundamentally different than going android, because then you lose it all.
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2011-07-08
, 13:29
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Posts: 1,400 |
Thanked: 3,751 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Arctic cold of northern .fi
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#173
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Popular outside of the US then, Google maps may trump them all in the US but that's because it's more popular not a better maps app? In your Europe at least Nokia Maps is the one to beat on a moible device.
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2011-07-08
, 13:31
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Posts: n/a |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on
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#174
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Popular outside of the US then, Google maps may trump them all in the US but that's because it's more popular not a better maps app? In your Europe at least Nokia Maps is the one to beat on a moible device.
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2011-07-08
, 13:45
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Posts: 738 |
Thanked: 983 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
@ London
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#175
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1
m$ charges royalties, Google doesn't
why is m$ better then Google for NOKIA?
or, for that matter, for any other companies who all seem to desert m$ and flock around android. or even MeeGo, for that matter...
why is m$ better then Google for the customer?
The Following User Says Thank You to erendorn For This Useful Post: | ||
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2011-07-08
, 14:00
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Posts: 523 |
Thanked: 292 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#176
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I'm not the type to believe it because somebody said so... so why is it so great?
I've used it. Found it lacking. Offline a factor? Google Maps 5.7 has that on Android. And on the N900, it still needed "some" access. So that was just a poor implementation.
Again. You're arguing "popular", which is opinion and not really bringing too many facts to the table. It suits your needs, uses. But without a lot of features on Maemo (yet) and with it on Symbian mostly... sure, Europe and Asia wills ay it's the most popular.
But as far as why, it's mainly because it's on more phones in those territories. I personally (my opinion) do not favor Nokia's Mapping software since it seems dated, sometimes sluggish, and on my N900, it wouldn't work in downtown Pittsburgh, Toronto, or Mexico City. Metro gave it hell. I didn't get it a chance whilst in Europe last time - didn't need the frustration.
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2011-07-08
, 14:29
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Posts: 74 |
Thanked: 142 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Chicago, US
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#177
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2011-07-08
, 15:11
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Posts: 457 |
Thanked: 600 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#178
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It's going to be interesting to see how the two biggest losers in digital services are somehow supposed to create good services together. Altough, I don't take it seriously that Nokia will have important role on WP7 services. It's just the usual hopeful thinking of a new Microsoft partner. They will get crushed in the partnership and relegated into a serf role by Redmond. Just like all previous MS partners (IBM, Dell, Altair, Apple etc).
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2011-07-08
, 15:17
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Posts: 173 |
Thanked: 219 times |
Joined on Nov 2010
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#179
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The Following 9 Users Say Thank You to number41 For This Useful Post: | ||
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2011-07-08
, 15:25
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Posts: n/a |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on
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#180
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Maybe I'm misinformed but I'm under the impression that a lot of GPS devices (Garmin, Magellan to name a few) use Navteq (owned by Nokia) maps.. so I wouldn't consider it irrelevant.
Tags |
balmer was here, e6 rox, elop rox, elop snopp, elop's fool, the elop flop |
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