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2010-01-28
, 19:16
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Posts: 139 |
Thanked: 224 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
@ San Francisco, CA
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#32
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If you look through the presentation they made to the financial community back in december, Nokia has already positioned Symbian to the midrange and lower, and Maemo as their "no compromise" platform.
Back in December the financial community did not believe Nokia's strategy but after today's profit and growth figures, mainly in the smartphones segment, Nokia's shares rose 10%.
For more about the Dec presentation check out my post here:
http://talk.maemo.org/showpost.php?p...9&postcount=16
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2010-01-28
, 21:08
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Posts: 607 |
Thanked: 450 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Washington, DC
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#33
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Thanks, I just looked at your insightful post.
I really hope Nokia executes well on Maemo. They need to move fast as the competition (especially Android) is moving very fast. I am still not convinced that they do all they can to make Maemo successful. Here are some ideas (might have been discussed elsewhere):
- Make beta-firmware freely available for testing using a mandatory sign in / waiver process (as it will brick devices!).
- Establish a monthly rhythm for feature upgrades (does not necessarily have to be firmware, could be stand alone applications and enhancements to these applications).
- "Leak" potential features from "Maemo Labs" (<= does this exist?) using blogs, youtube, twitter, whatever.
- Release some accessories for the N900 and use releases to create some buzz about N900 / Maemo (dock, Nokia branded blue tooth (hi fi) speaker system, ...)
- ....
I really hope Nokia executes to make Maemo really successful. As I wrote in my earlier post I pay more attention to Nokia's actions than to announcements. Words are cheap nowadays...
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2010-01-29
, 14:02
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Posts: 56 |
Thanked: 9 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ ,, Earth !
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#34
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2010-01-29
, 22:36
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Posts: 220 |
Thanked: 129 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#35
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While I would not mind seeing any of your suggestions, I think that they would represent a decision by Nokia to avoid growing the Maemo market. My worry, every time I hear Nokia talk about Symbian, is that they view Maemo as strictly a test bed. They don't many phone models running Maemo because one or two will do (e.g. I suspect the N900 has a keyboard because of their N800/N810 experiment).
The problem is that Maemo may be and may continue to be Nokia's test lab. Any insights it provides will be fleshed out and polished in the Symbian world. For Linux geeks it won't really matter. Others might not want to live on the bleeding edge when it comes to their phone.
Back in December the financial community did not believe Nokia's strategy but after today's profit and growth figures, mainly in the smartphones segment, Nokia's shares rose 10%.
For more about the Dec presentation check out my post here:
http://talk.maemo.org/showpost.php?p...9&postcount=16