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2011-01-26
, 18:29
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Posts: 1,885 |
Thanked: 2,008 times |
Joined on Aug 2009
@ OVI MAPS
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#52
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This is truly doubtful. Nothing has surfaced for their very important N8, and it has features that a lot of folks would jump for if they knew about it.
In the US, subsidizing - a tactic that's unique to Central and North America by now, dropped everywhere else - is king. And Nokia has bucked that system more than once.
http://sisleyme.chatango.com
Hell. Perhaps I do need to be on their marketing team.
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2011-01-26
, 18:30
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Posts: 113 |
Thanked: 26 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#53
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I suspect that there never has been an Atom based handset inside Nokia. If anything, the one that was canceled was the OMAP3 based device supposedly running MeeGo/Harmattan, replaced with a Cortex-A9 based hardware design running MeeGo.
I'll be surprised if there's an x86 based phone out this year.
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2011-01-26
, 18:40
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Posts: 1,746 |
Thanked: 2,100 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#54
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Can you get something out of a smartphone that needs dual cores? If anything, it is a bragging right.
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2011-01-26
, 19:00
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Posts: 113 |
Thanked: 26 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#55
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Yes. Mostly because your competitors (all of them) are releasing devices based upon the Cortex-A9. Never mind the fact that having a secondary processor to handle other tasks will let both sleep sooner.
If Nokia's high-end device of 2011 came out with a CPU others had used throughout 2010 and moved on from, they would be bashed so heavily in the media everything we hear today would pale in comparison, even if it worked as slick as could be.
That's not to say there won't be Cortex-A8 devices on the market, but they absolutely won't be the high end flagship device that they used to be. Motorola Atrix, LG Optimus 2X, Samsung's Orion based device, whatever HTC plans on releasing. That's the high end, and where the vendors will get attention.
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2011-01-26
, 19:07
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Posts: 1,746 |
Thanked: 2,100 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#56
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Ah so you believe, like the others, that since Apple released their iPhone form factor, everyone else had to copy that.
This isnt about doing what your competitors are doing. Its about gaining sales.
I cannot think of a reason why a smartphone now would want to use a dual core processor or better yet want to POWER (power = batter) a dual core processor. Make no sense at all.
As of right now, I do not see any marketing from any company stating "This is a (company name) (model)! It has dual cores! More cores more..." whatever. What you have said is true but for now no company has used it as a excessive market sheme AFAIK
Motorola Atrix: Great phone except no keyboard, internal storage is low compared to the N900 (for example), and resolution is kind of strange (Android issue).
LG Optimus X2: Nothing too special (compared to the Motrola Atrix) except the dual core. Low storage (compared to anything). This phone could be released exactly the same without the dual core and it wouldnt make a difference as it has been shown that a single core can also record 1080p.
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2011-01-26
, 19:16
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Posts: 1,062 |
Thanked: 961 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ Boston, MA
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#57
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This isnt about doing what your competitors are doing. Its about gaining sales. I cannot think of a reason why a smartphone now would want to use a dual core processor or better yet want to POWER (power = batter) a dual core processor. Make no sense at all.
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2011-01-26
, 19:28
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Posts: 1,839 |
Thanked: 2,432 times |
Joined on May 2009
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#58
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We agreed that [MeeGo] would be… open to all architectures. And we will see this happen this year. You're going to see a major focus at MWC to be as bold this year as we were last year... particularly in some areas such as the device area.
You'll see ARM-based MeeGo devices this year
We're going to see you all at MWC though right? We have lots to talk about.
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2011-01-26
, 20:59
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Posts: 163 |
Thanked: 96 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Israel
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#59
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This isnt about doing what your competitors are doing. Its about gaining sales. I cannot think of a reason why a smartphone now would want to use a dual core processor or better yet want to POWER (power = batter) a dual core processor. Make no sense at all.
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2011-01-26
, 22:07
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Posts: 113 |
Thanked: 26 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#60
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What? Who cares about formfactor? My point is that EVERYONE is releasing a high end phone with an A9 core.
It is about what your competitors are doing. That's what everyone is comparing Nokia to: their competitors. Apple, Samsung, Motorola.
Indeed, you cannot. That doesn't mean no one can, or that no one needs a dual core.
Except that it is a feature touted by every vendor with a device on its way?
Regardless of how little use you see in a dual core processor here (I imagine you think my quad core laptop is excessive) there will be people who are more than willing to make use of it. Never mind the tech media who will have a field day if Nokia can't match it.
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just shoot me, why?? |
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I'll be surprised if there's an x86 based phone out this year.