The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to fms For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-11-12
, 22:47
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Posts: 129 |
Thanked: 18 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ Switzerland
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#122
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2009-11-12
, 23:14
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Posts: 119 |
Thanked: 412 times |
Joined on Aug 2008
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#123
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2009-11-12
, 23:27
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Posts: 129 |
Thanked: 18 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ Switzerland
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#124
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2009-11-12
, 23:31
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Posts: 361 |
Thanked: 108 times |
Joined on Sep 2008
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#125
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Exactly, I don't believe that there is some hardware limitation that just makes it impossible for Nokia to create a version of Maemo 6 that works on the N900.
It also may well be in Nokia's financial interest to do so. Obviously Maemo, and perhaps especially Maemo 6, is Nokia's answer to the iPhone. One of the things that has made the iPhone so profitable is the app store and iTunes, a source a revenue that extends well beyond the sale of the device itself. So you want to keep people engaged and happy with the device they have, so they keep coming back to purchase the other software based goodies. If people feel like they're being left behind after only a year, on the N900, their next device may well be an iPhone, WinMo phone, Android phone. They won't have as much of a reason to stick with Nokia and Maemo and so Nokia will lose the revenue stream from that customer that would go to the Ovi store, etc. Look at the crazy dedication people have to Apple products. Apple doesn't get there by leaving people behind. But if leaving people behind is what Nokia does with the N900, then it will risk remaining a niche product like the N95 and other high end smart phones of Nokia's past, rather than break out the way the iPhone and Android have.
The Following User Says Thank You to dantonic For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-11-12
, 23:36
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Posts: 361 |
Thanked: 108 times |
Joined on Sep 2008
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#126
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Uuuhm... did you see the most recent commercial for the N900? If Nokia internally works like that, geeeez, the answer to that last question will be "No!"...
Ok, seriously, no they won't of course change as drastically as they did from OS2008 to Maemo 5. *BUT* I do think the N900 will be abandoned upon the presentation of the next gen Nxxx. Transition from the niche and experimental test bed onto consumer land most likely also means a change in marketing technique, eg. marketing behaviour which has to be considered normal in mass markets. Abandoning previous device generations *is* perfectly normal in electronical gadget mass markets. And it's not like they didn't try before with the 770 and the N800.
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2009-11-12
, 23:41
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Posts: 607 |
Thanked: 450 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Washington, DC
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#127
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I'm pretty sure Maemo 6 will be available for the N900, otherwise it's pretty unfair. A device like the N900 is the the start of something great, you can't just bring a second device out & expect the N900 to just rot away.
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2009-11-12
, 23:49
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Posts: 129 |
Thanked: 18 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ Switzerland
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#128
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2009-11-12
, 23:50
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Posts: 4,672 |
Thanked: 5,455 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Springfield, MA, USA
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#129
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2009-11-12
, 23:59
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Posts: 4,672 |
Thanked: 5,455 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Springfield, MA, USA
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#130
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Nokia has never been overly concerned with yesterday's customer. If you buy the N900, expect to upgrade to a new phone if you want a new OS.
Well the previous tables can't upgrade to Fremantle because of hardware issues. Think of the UI, it's fully hardware accelerated. Hardware the N8xx's don't feature. But the N900's successors are most likely quite similar, hardware wise. Still I think the N900 will be maintained for a couple months into the new devices lifetime and then abandoned. We'll see, we'll see...
Tags |
compatibility, future, harmattan, harmattan is for new $$$, maemo, maemo 6, n900, speculation, upgrade |
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