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2011-02-13
, 23:46
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Posts: 12 |
Thanked: 24 times |
Joined on Oct 2010
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#42
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In the days before the announcement there was also a piece about Nokia's huge R&D spending that suddenly showed up also out of thin air.
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2011-02-13
, 23:51
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Posts: 1,097 |
Thanked: 650 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#43
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2011-02-13
, 23:55
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Posts: 289 |
Thanked: 560 times |
Joined on May 2009
@ Tampere, Finland
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#44
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2011-02-13
, 23:56
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Posts: 96 |
Thanked: 82 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ New Jersey, USA
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#45
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Bull. Look at the average blokes in the shops. They don't need 200'000 apps. They want a nice UI and good basic apps. Many people I know realised they don't need many apps on their android devices, just the basics.
So Nokia would have been able to keep their market share with something better than symbian.
And especially something uniquely Nokia, that is how you keep customers. Actually its the reason why nokia until now still sold more symbian devices than all others android devices.
It is also how apple survived in times of crisis.
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2011-02-14
, 00:03
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Posts: 289 |
Thanked: 560 times |
Joined on May 2009
@ Tampere, Finland
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#46
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2. Nokia didn't have anything better than Symbian ready to go.If they did, they'd have already deployed it.
3. Nokia will have complete control over WP7 on their phones.
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2011-02-14
, 00:06
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Posts: 337 |
Thanked: 283 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ NYC
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#47
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The question is: What will make me wait for Nokia and not buy a WP7 device now? I don't wanna buy it now, and won't buy it in a year.
Good luck Mr. Flop.
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2011-02-14
, 00:10
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Posts: 1,097 |
Thanked: 650 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#48
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But they don't have WP7 ready to go either until maybe somewhere towards the end of this year. Like with MeeGo. Only they now destroyed their Symbian sales too by announcing it's going out.
But not the ecosystem, that's the big thing here.
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2011-02-14
, 00:29
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Posts: 25 |
Thanked: 27 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Amsterdam
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#49
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I know it's popular at the moment to lay all the blame at Elop or at Nokia management (current or past). But maybe the truth is really that MeeGo was just to late and not good enough?
The impression that I get from various threads here and elsewhere is that at the moment MeeGo is still nowhere near ready, and an end-user ready release is at least another 6 months away. Now in the alternative world were Nokia did decide to ride it out with MeeGo, by the time it's finally market ready (autumn? winter?), was it actually going to be better for mass market end users than the iPhone 5 or the Samsung and HTC Android 3.x devices it would be competing against? Somehow I doubt it.
Of course, I don't believe that Nokia WP7 devices are anywhere near ready yet, and they may take even longer to get on the market. So it's not like I'm endorsing this move. All I'm saying is, maybe Nokia's fate was already sealed a long time ago. Maybe the only way they could have turned the tide was if they had reacted faster, developed faster, delivered faster than they could.
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2011-02-14
, 00:30
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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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The Following 8 Users Say Thank You to Texrat For This Useful Post: | ||
I can just imagine if someone came here and went on and on about MMS, portrait mode or all the other features Maemo was missing the way y'all are going on about things that are already in the first update (cut and paste) or that don't stop iPhone buyers (multitasking). Is cut and paste any more of an omission than custom ringtones? The most powerful OS developer in the world joins forces with the greatest phone hardware developer in the world. It's IBM + MS all over again. I don't see how this can be a bad thing in the end.
Yesterday Tunisia... today Egypt... tomorrow Vatican City... eventually Texas!