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2009-09-13
, 20:07
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Posts: 17 |
Thanked: 9 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#52
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Actually pretty much any of the european model phones support TMO. TMO is international and their carrier in the US is using the same freqs as those in Europe/Asia/Africa/etc... That is really the reason why the N900 has those freqs -- its because this phone was never targeted for the NA area -- but the rest of the world where their customer base is larger. Nokia has no presence really in the US. Go to any phone store and you see primarily LG, Samsung, Moto, HTC. Maybe (if your lucky) 1 model of Nokia... In this regard because they stopped doing things in NA years ago -- they are actually "being smart", since targetting Euro/Asia/Africa is the largest slice of the "whole" pie.
Nathan.
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2009-09-13
, 20:21
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Posts: 733 |
Thanked: 991 times |
Joined on Dec 2008
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#53
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2009-09-13
, 22:32
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Posts: 109 |
Thanked: 26 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ Caribbean
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#54
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TMO is international and their carrier in the US is using the same freqs as those in Europe/Asia/Africa/etc... That is really the reason why the N900 has those freqs -- its because this phone was never targeted for the NA area -- but the rest of the world where their customer base is larger. .
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2009-09-13
, 22:55
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Posts: 4,556 |
Thanked: 1,624 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#55
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2009-09-14
, 15:42
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Posts: 1,096 |
Thanked: 760 times |
Joined on Dec 2008
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#56
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2009-09-14
, 15:57
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Posts: 362 |
Thanked: 109 times |
Joined on May 2009
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#57
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2009-09-14
, 16:23
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Posts: 733 |
Thanked: 991 times |
Joined on Dec 2008
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#58
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You say "Nokia is buddy buddy with DT [Deutsche Telekom] lately"... Why is that? Because look, Nokia cannot even sell through T-Mobile (owned by DT) its N900 custom made for T-Mobile frequencies (N900 which does not work on AT&T 3G network)...
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2009-09-14
, 16:34
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Posts: 267 |
Thanked: 128 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Somerville MA - USA
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#59
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They (nokia) got one shot at this, and they have to be sure it is going to work.
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2009-09-14
, 16:40
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Posts: 733 |
Thanked: 991 times |
Joined on Dec 2008
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#60
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they shouldn't have done this whole media blitz, pre-order thing.
They should have figured out relationships, standard software packages etc before making any public statement on it. Look at the trending on searches (http://www.google.com/trends?q=n900&...ate=mtd&sort=0)
Having worked for a German firm, I thought that German marketing was some of the worst in the world, maybe I should look north before giving that title away
Check this quote from Texrat in post #184 of the following thread:
http://talk.maemo.org/showthread.php?t=31293&page=19
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"I've said this numerous times so please forgive the repeat:
Nokia TRIED to change the US model. Competitors saw an opportunity to grab market share as Nokia worked toward a more open, retail-based service. The effort worked against Nokia and in favor of LG, Samsung, Moto, et al.
Cracking the crazy US market would take more than Nokia-- it would take the combined effort of every single manufacturer getting on the same page and standing tough (or the FCC and FTC doing their jobs). I don't see that happening."
770, N800, N810, N82