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2012-06-14
, 12:50
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Posts: 463 |
Thanked: 103 times |
Joined on Jul 2010
@ Mumbai, India
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#42
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2012-06-14
, 12:58
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Posts: 1,326 |
Thanked: 1,524 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
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#43
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2012-06-14
, 13:02
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Posts: 468 |
Thanked: 610 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
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#44
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2012-06-14
, 13:03
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Posts: 1,400 |
Thanked: 3,751 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Arctic cold of northern .fi
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#45
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2012-06-14
, 13:08
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Posts: 468 |
Thanked: 610 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
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#46
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2012-06-14
, 13:12
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Posts: 457 |
Thanked: 600 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#47
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Very sad to me.....
because these guys have been under great pressure, from top to bottom, to deliver.
Now Meltemi is dead, I think there is nothing that cannot be said.
The big problem for Meltemi I have been seeing is the constantly-changing strategy, and the schedule slip. It was originally planned to have public demo in Q2, SDK and API documents available soon after. There were talks about budget allocated to create thousands of apps for product launch. Operators loved Meltemi UI. There was plan for a higher-end low-end phone that might be what people here can live with. People were already planning about tablet.
But somehow the project is way behind schedule in reality. This becomes uncomfortably clear the closer we are to Q2 end. Schedule slip ensued.... from a few weeks to a quarter, and create a chain effect to the whole project launch.
For the slip, in some ways I think Nokia wasted too much time keeping Meltemi in secret mode. This barrier hinder the debugging significantly. But there must be other things that make all this not happening fast enough.....
Also, Mary's leaving shows Nokia is losing the low-end market really bad. S40 touch cannot compete with low-end Android, and without Meltemi Nokia has nothing to fight the little green robots. It's dead end for Nokia in mobile phone. Game is over. The meager profit from Windows phone cannot support the company. Nokia is dead to me.
Anyway, big thanks for people working on this project. I am sure some of them will shed more lights in the future... I still cannot believe how Nokia manged to repeat history in such a short time frame. It is unfair to put all blames on Elop because many things are already set in stone when he arrived, but the strategy he planned is crumbling in every way. He should fire himself first.....
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2012-06-14
, 13:15
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Posts: 463 |
Thanked: 103 times |
Joined on Jul 2010
@ Mumbai, India
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#48
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2012-06-14
, 13:21
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Posts: 468 |
Thanked: 610 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
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#49
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You don't scrap a billion dollar development program because of a 1Q schedule slip. The problem with elop and board: Internal development is not seen as a key asset, they have the attitude that they're just gonna use some outside OS if things don't go the optimal way. That way they will never be a major tech company. Neither Apple, Google or MS would just abandon their engineers that way.
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2012-06-14
, 13:22
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Posts: 1,523 |
Thanked: 1,997 times |
Joined on Jul 2011
@ not your mom's FOSS basement
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#50
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Tags |
downward_spiral, fu_flop, memories |
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It's a very quiet launch cos it's supposed to be 15 June 2012. If 7 June was actual launch, wow, that's even lower profile than N9(which had press ads and posters)