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2010-06-11
, 21:22
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Posts: 2,050 |
Thanked: 1,425 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ Bucharest
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#42
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The point is not a channel for a million people but for a representative body, ie, the community council. The channel for millions of end users already exists (I won't go into its effectivity).
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2010-06-11
, 21:23
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Posts: 1,559 |
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Joined on Oct 2009
@ Boston
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#43
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2010-06-11
, 21:31
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#44
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Would a channel for the council not be a channel for the millions by proxy?
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2010-06-11
, 21:33
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Posts: 2,050 |
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Joined on Dec 2009
@ Bucharest
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#45
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Absolutely. But Nokia need only see a single point of communication (albeit backed by collective data).
If you would compare Nokia NIT and the cheap Chinese Maemo devices, the "only" differences are Nokia proprietary apps.
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2010-06-11
, 21:34
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Posts: 1,716 |
Thanked: 3,007 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ Warsaw, Poland
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#46
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2010-06-11
, 21:37
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Posts: 136 |
Thanked: 72 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#47
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2010-06-11
, 21:45
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#48
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My opinion is the main problem is in the fact, that Maemo is not Nokia core business product. IIRC 98% of revenue is generated by Symbian devices.
The Maemo branch is giving little money and a lot of high demands.
I personally admire the persistence of Maemo team in Nokia, so they were able to push this product for so long with all the odds against them. In normal company this product line would be shut off a long time ago.
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2010-06-11
, 21:57
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Posts: 2,050 |
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Joined on Dec 2009
@ Bucharest
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#49
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[...]
I personally admire the persistence of Maemo team in Nokia, so they were able to push this product for so long with all the odds against them. In normal company this product line would be shut off a long time ago.
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2010-06-11
, 22:02
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#50
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Who knows, maybe Nokia thinks of smartphone market as an experiment, a hiccup, a toy for the geek. Maybe they don't see this as the future of mobility. Maybe they think the market will always be 90% composed of dumb, keypad-and-red-green button phones like it was 10 years ago. In which case, I'd make like the rat and flee the ship.
...the future is mobile. In the first quarter of 2010, the global smartphone market grew by 56.7%. In a downturned global economy. And that was twice the growth of standard mobile phones in the same period.
That’s not happening anymore for deskbound devices. Gartner says that by 2013, “mobile phones will overtake PCs as the most common Web access device worldwide.”
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