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2010-11-25
, 02:14
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@ Malaysia
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#122
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What is going on???
Nokia sold less than 100,000 N900 in its first five months on the market, researcher Gartner said.
Nokia told that more than 100,000 N900s sold in the first five weeks -- not months -- globally.
Is researcher Gartner limited to one country, or is a serious contradiction here?
Analyst predictions – like any other – should generally be taken with a pinch of salt (the Steve Ballmer at WWDC 2010 speculation is good evidence of quite how much sodium is necessary), but it seems someone at Gartner has been seriously mistaken in their counting. They’re quoted as claiming under 100,000 Nokia N900 units were sold in its first five months on the market; however, a source we spoke to at Nokia today told us that in fact the Finnish company sold “well in excess of 100,000″ N900 handsets in the first five weeks.
In fact, Nokia apparently had trouble meeting demand for the N900, and have seen sustained sales of the handset since its launch. Nokia won’t disclose exact sales figures for the N900, but it seems Gartner have gotten considerably confused somewhere along the line.
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2010-11-25
, 02:27
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#123
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maybe you are right and nokia intended to scare off the customers. maybe that's why it failed, maybe it's for it was supposed to fail. don't know - but i am very interested what the factors are that scare off the customers, be it intended or not.
you say its:
- form factor
- missing mms support.(do customers even know that the n900 is not mms capable until they bought it)
that's all? what else?
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2010-11-25
, 02:32
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Joined on May 2010
@ Hong Kong
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#124
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2010-11-25
, 02:52
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#125
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Nokia sold 50,000 N900s in the last quarter of 2009, and quarterly sales fell in January-March, Gartner statistics showed. Gartner does not track phone sales per model, but as the N900 is the only phone using Maemo, the statistics for operating systems show sales for the model.
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2010-11-25
, 03:21
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Posts: 1,425 |
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Joined on May 2010
@ Hong Kong
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#126
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Nokia sold 50,000 N900s in the last quarter of 2009, and quarterly sales fell in January-March, Gartner statistics showed. Gartner does not track phone sales per model, but as the N900 is the only phone using Maemo, the statistics for operating systems show sales for the model.
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2010-11-25
, 03:34
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Joined on Oct 2010
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#127
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2010-11-25
, 03:49
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Joined on Jun 2010
@ N900: Battery low. N950: torx 4 re-used once and fine; SIM port torn apart
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#128
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I was kidding before, though it's true for some cases, anyway. My apology.
What you quoted is exactly where the controversial is.
Gartner did not state clearly in their disclaimer what exactly the statistics for operating systems are. It's impossible to count the licenses sold, as you may know Maemo has no licensing term of royalty as in Symbian.
Some guess that they use no. of unique IP that were accessing to the repositories. Again very little evident has shown that Gartner requested the Nokia to give the actual figure accessing their repositories, and Nokia obviously would not compile in giving such statistics.
So what exactly is the statistics and where do they come from? I personally think it's out of thin air as usual. Just in my personal opinion anyway.
I wondered if the predicted sales figures would be favourite to Nokia if they've not been cooperating with any business analyst in disclosing sales figure in the first place.
Anyway, I personally don't mind if N900 was sold less 10K in the first 5 months; if it's really the case, I'd even feel rather privileged in having a N900.
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2010-11-25
, 03:56
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@ Hong Kong
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#129
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Theoretically, Gartner might have used data from retailers (how many N900/Blackberry/iPhone they sold) and use this proportion, along with known figures for some devices from manufacturers.
I have an N900 which came from country A (from Nokia retailer here?) through country B (middle-stop) to country C (the end user; the device brand new). The path took more than a year (warranty expired). It would be interesting to know how Gartner and Nokia counted it, to what year and country they attributed it.
Though it cannot explain all the discrepancies in data, of course...
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2010-11-25
, 04:28
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Joined on Nov 2010
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#130
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making popcorn, op stop posting |
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you say its:
- form factor
- missing mms support.(do customers even know that the n900 is not mms capable until they bought it)
that's all? what else?
Last edited by lunat; 2010-11-25 at 02:08.