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2007-09-11
, 00:18
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#242
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I'd be more than happy to speculate on all things Nokia that are yet to manifest - the only trouble is, it would be a very short conversation.
As for grounding myself in reality, I'm simply repeating the projections of respected technology analysts - people paid to understand this stuff.
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2007-09-11
, 00:23
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Posts: 729 |
Thanked: 19 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
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#243
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Hunting for free open WiFi hotspots is indeed a problem. Even in airports (where it shouldn't be).
I am very hopeful that Sprint delivers. To have an Internet connection and unlimited VoIP minutes everywhere w/o the limitations of US 3G data plans is a big advantage for the N800 WiMax version. This is where/how the Nokia IT can still compete/differentiate itself. Apple cannot roll-out connectivity solutions as well as Nokia, certainly not as quickly. Even now, they can't even do 3G.
Well maybe Mr. T hacked the game, and made a mowhawk class? And maybe Mr. T is pretty handy with computers? Had that occurred to you Mr. Condescending Director?
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2007-09-11
, 00:41
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Posts: 3,401 |
Thanked: 1,255 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
@ London, UK
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#244
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2007-09-11
, 00:47
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#245
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2007-09-11
, 00:51
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Posts: 729 |
Thanked: 19 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
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#246
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This has been an awesome discussion. I hope everyone's having as much fun as I am!
Well maybe Mr. T hacked the game, and made a mowhawk class? And maybe Mr. T is pretty handy with computers? Had that occurred to you Mr. Condescending Director?
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2007-09-11
, 02:03
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Posts: 169 |
Thanked: 38 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ Brooklyn, NY
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#247
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Are you telling me that Kansas City has more on the ball when it comes to free/open wi-fi than both San Francisco and New York City?
Maybe folks in the mid-west/south are more about "sharing" than the money-grubbing slime that live in those two big cities?
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2007-09-11
, 02:37
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Posts: 729 |
Thanked: 19 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
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#248
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I believe it's a population density issue. NYC's is 27,083 people per square mile, SF is 15,834 and KC is 1,406. NYC and SF are also heavily traveled (tourism, visitors, etc.) so you're serving that many more people on top of the resident population, and are open to that much more resource demand & potential abuse (don't forget), which overwhelms a lot of small businesses. Also, because these cities have such high rents and cost-of-living, those businesses require rapid turnover to make the sales needed to survive, and offering someone wi-fi access for free means they just hang around, slowing customer turnover and blocking new ones. (Hell, New York has had blackouts that have forced businesses to close for good -- it's not pretty.)
Paying for wi-fi doesn't just fund infrastructure and balance out the sag in turnover, it also weeds out the leechers (both in the store and in the 4 office buildings surrounding your store) from the people who care enough about their network needs to think a good wi-fi connection is worth something.
Essentially, it's a defensive maneuver.
Well maybe Mr. T hacked the game, and made a mowhawk class? And maybe Mr. T is pretty handy with computers? Had that occurred to you Mr. Condescending Director?
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2007-09-11
, 02:39
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Posts: 169 |
Thanked: 38 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ Brooklyn, NY
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#249
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2007-09-11
, 02:56
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Posts: 729 |
Thanked: 19 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
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#250
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BTW: I just got the October MacWorld in the mail (pre-announcement, obviously) and there's an op-ed piece in there about new iPods called "I Want Buttons" and cites his own iPhone experiences as examples.
Well maybe Mr. T hacked the game, and made a mowhawk class? And maybe Mr. T is pretty handy with computers? Had that occurred to you Mr. Condescending Director?
I am very hopeful that Sprint delivers. To have an Internet connection and unlimited VoIP minutes everywhere w/o the limitations of US 3G data plans is a big advantage for the N800 WiMax version. This is where/how the Nokia IT can still compete/differentiate itself. Apple cannot roll-out connectivity solutions as well as Nokia, certainly not as quickly. Even now, they can't even do 3G.