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2012-02-09
, 16:05
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Posts: 617 |
Thanked: 338 times |
Joined on Mar 2011
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#12
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2012-02-09
, 16:07
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Posts: 7,075 |
Thanked: 9,073 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Moon! It's not the East or the West side... it's the Dark Side
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#13
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In terms of build?
Especially pertinent since this thread is about assembly.
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2012-02-09
, 16:19
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Posts: 371 |
Thanked: 252 times |
Joined on Nov 2010
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#14
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2012-02-09
, 16:23
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Posts: 139 |
Thanked: 224 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
@ San Francisco, CA
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#15
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It's not even the workers costs alone, petty much all of Nokia's sub-contractors are in Asia, like every other manufacturer from Samsung, Apple, LG, SE etc etc.
It was matter of time.
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2012-02-09
, 16:24
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Posts: n/a |
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Joined on
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#16
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in most terms, but especially when it comes to carry a company in need of a great phone.
They trying to be like samsung?
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2012-02-09
, 16:45
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Posts: 1,839 |
Thanked: 2,432 times |
Joined on May 2009
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#17
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You are absolutely right with sub-contractors and cost. However, there is another cost that needs to part of the equation: Brand value.
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2012-02-09
, 16:46
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Posts: 470 |
Thanked: 399 times |
Joined on Jul 2011
@ Croatia
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#18
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TBQH I remember nokia being a cool company by 2004/2005. They were constantly in contact with symbian websites, blogs and their customers. The first time I was able to run Picodrive on a phone was on my 6600 during that time and that changed my opinion of what a phone could be forever. After the launch of the n95 they stopped being the same company. Negative reviews started pouring in on their newer models (96/97/n81) and the ngage 2.0 platform got lackluster support from both publishers and customers. Yet, those same dedicated symbian websites and blogs that had supported Nokia for years couldn't write anything bad about the company because they feared being blacklisted from events and stuff. It's like they were covering their ears and singing while their business crumbled around them. I distinctly remember reading about this on allboutsymbian or my-symbian, don't quite recall which one.
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2012-02-09
, 17:00
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Posts: 7,075 |
Thanked: 9,073 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Moon! It's not the East or the West side... it's the Dark Side
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#19
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I have to disagree. Harmattan has only the N9 and N950. Out of all of the WP7 phones, the Lumia 800 is better than all of the rest of the WP7 phones, HTC Titan II probably excepted.
But each phone OS needs a model that all others aspire to be. Google got it right with their Nexus line. Those are to be the "experience" phones for that OS - so throw the most up-to-date OS, updated hardware and features, then have them trickle down to the other phone manufacturers.
WP7 finally has one with the Lumia 800 and 900. A "halo phone", or flagship - finally for WP7. Hate WP7 as much as you may want, you have to look at each and every mobile OS and you will find that each of them have had a "flagship" of sorts.
I don't see Nokia trying to be like Samsung. I see Microsoft trying to find their flagship and push it upfront like Google does with the Nexus line.
You do know that the manufacturers have to vie for the Nexus line designation?
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2012-02-09
, 17:08
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Posts: 1,839 |
Thanked: 2,432 times |
Joined on May 2009
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#20
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and than came n900 and n8 and company started to go the right way until microsoft came into play...
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Especially pertinent since this thread is about assembly.