wickermonkey
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2010-02-14
, 20:39
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Posts: 51 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#31
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The Following User Says Thank You to wickermonkey For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-02-14
, 21:29
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Posts: 3,617 |
Thanked: 2,412 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ Cambridge, UK
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#32
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One of the positive aspects of the "AppStore model" is that it's a new revenue stream for handset manufacturers that their income isn't solely generated by hardware sales. The phones are not the end product, but they become content delivery machines that can keep generating revenues for the AppStore owner.
This is an added incentive for them to:
a). Support the existing phones/devices as long as possible.
b). Upgrade their old handsets to be compatible with the AppStore model, enabling them to generate income from the old models.
c). Design their products to be as backward-forward compatible as possible, while incorporating new features to enhance the new products.
Apple nailed the above aspects well... so I'd say there'll be more iPhone-like traits in future smartphones (including from Nokia).
The Following User Says Thank You to Rob1n For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-02-14
, 22:04
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Posts: 83 |
Thanked: 34 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Poole, UK
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#33
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Total BS. For example, the Nokia 5800 now has the new home screen from the 5230 and kinetic scrolling.
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2010-02-14
, 23:39
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Posts: 70 |
Thanked: 60 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#34
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2010-02-15
, 02:20
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Posts: 152 |
Thanked: 47 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Shanghai, China
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#35
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Surely it also depends on how apple, android and nokia are structuring there OS releases. Just because apple have changed to version number from 1.0 -3.0 and soon to be 4.0 is there really that much of a difference compared to the difference in maemo 1-5 and soon to be 6. Don't forget that apple 1.0 was always destined to be on the iPhone where Maemo started life on a MID
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2010-02-15
, 02:30
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Posts: 152 |
Thanked: 47 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Shanghai, China
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#36
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2010-02-15
, 06:31
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Posts: 4,384 |
Thanked: 5,524 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ ˙ǝɹǝɥʍou
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#37
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Do you suggest that hardware manufacturers would make more money from the small cut they get from a customer buying 5-6 new applications for 4-5 dollars each than they would make if they force you into buying a new $500 handset 6 months earlier than you normally would? I don't believe this makes sense.
Nokia and Apple sell hardware; the apps, stores, open source, is just the bait to make their hardware more attractive. I am sure that when Apple come up with how to change the iPhone (the upgrades we've witnessed are insubstantial compared to what NITs have gone through, for example), they will abandon backwards compatibility.
OTOH, software companies like MS maintain compatibility to an unmatched extent.
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2010-02-15
, 17:46
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Posts: 337 |
Thanked: 283 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ NYC
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#38
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....Where in the old business model they don't get any revenues _AT_ALL_ from their old products, in the new app/content-delivery market, these old products can potentially keep a revenue stream for them. Don't for get that:
a). The app/content library will always grow
b). So will their customer base, as second hand handsets are passed on to other users
You do the math...
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2010-02-15
, 17:59
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Posts: 4,384 |
Thanked: 5,524 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ ˙ǝɹǝɥʍou
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#39
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no, not from the OLD products, but from the new ones that are being sold more often due to the need of the customers to keep up when compatibility breaks.
Let's wait and see whether Maemo 6 and 5 are compatibe (or if n900 runs Maemo 6), and whether any real changes to the iPhone (e.g decent screen resolution or improvements in the OS usability) break backward compatibility or not. Then we can talk again.
As to apps, the vast majority of those simply compensate for the lack of real computer capabilities on the smartphones. As phones become able to run real computer software, most apps will become obsolete.
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2010-02-15
, 19:00
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Posts: 1,751 |
Thanked: 844 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Sweden
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#40
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