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Re: PC Pro gives the N810 3/6
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Does any product of which at least one person would buy at least one, with no marketing, supply an organic need? Or does any product which can gain an additional sale by marketing supply a marketing-induced need? I see no other ways to draw a distinction, except drawing arbitrary thresholds in the continuum between those. (Such thresholds are difficult to defend objectively.) They all may be forgone in favor of other expenditures, so marketing has some effect on all of them. And it seems to me that the devices you're discussing (phones and tablets) are solidly in the middle. So, I'd not care to put myself in the position of trying to draw lines in subjective places and argue their objectivity. It's a subjective statement, naturally. But the subjective opinion it expresses seems a healthy enough one. |
Re: PC Pro gives the N810 3/6
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Here's a worthwhile exercise for some of the people who demand PIM functionality -- why not put together a simple business case with pricing, market demand, revenue forecasts, development/marketing/headcount/support costs, EBITDA, ROI and see if it makes sense to build an application through a 3rd party contractor and see if it makes business sense to initiate development on such PIM functionality. Trust me, it's a LOT harder than it looks, and many of us sometimes fall into the trap of believing that companies owe us something. Nokia has made good on what the tablet is supposed to do with functionality out of the box, and even left the platform open with SDKs that 3rd party developers could use to build applications by popular demand. That's a lot more than I could say for the iPhone and the iPod Touch. Both have great potential, and in some cases, even better than the iT based on my set of needs, if it weren't for the absence of more BT support (A2DP, DUN, etc). |
Re: PC Pro gives the N810 3/6
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As far as internet tablets go, they do appear to be utility devices although Nokia insists on them being "lifestyle" devices for some reason, and this is exactly why you see so many people in these forums complaining about lacking a PIM, an office suite, etc. I can only guess why tablets are marketed this way. Maybe because they are marketed under N-series label and N-series are considered "lifestyle". |
Re: PC Pro gives the N810 3/6
I think the distinction between 'organic' and 'marketing induced' needs is kind of a forced one. What about 'culture-induced' needs? The point is that beyond food, clothes and shelter all needs are elastic. At some point (price, availability, coolness) people are willing to trade one need for the other. You can say that you 'need' a car or a cellphone, but that changes as soon as telepathy and teleporting comes along, or when living in small self-sufficient communities becomes the new thing.
<edit> You could criticize Nokia for not meeting existing needs with the Internet Tablets, but really they are trying to make people trade existing needs (newspaper,phonecontract) for new ones (being always-online via wimax) and being the most experienced and best positioned in that newly created market by the time it becomes mainstream. </edit> |
Re: PC Pro gives the N810 3/6
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Re: PC Pro gives the N810 3/6
I don't think writing a PIM is that hard, compared to say writing device drivers..
Needs a really good conception, a lot of specifications and clear interfaces to other programs. The latter is not easy when you exchange with undocumented softwares. Thank god TCP/IP is standardized.. Sure it needs a lot of coding but I'm not sure the complexity is that hard. And no, I won't code it ;) ps: Personnaly, I don't need a PIM on the IT. Just to say that priorities of some are not priorities of everyone. I would prefer a window manager, I mean a real one where you can move windows. I'm very impatient to see what Nokia's doing with Qt Keep on talking about organic needs, very interesting.. |
Re: PC Pro gives the N810 3/6
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How do you distinguish between these two types of marketing? Do you consider that no-one would want (even with no cost) a device fulfilling only a marketing-induced need, in the absence of marketing? Even your urinal-drinking fountain would be desirable (with no costs) because you could use it for either a urinal or a drinking fountain, both of which are nice to have about. Quote:
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Re: PC Pro gives the N810 3/6
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Re: PC Pro gives the N810 3/6
Just realized how long we have been going back and forth; barring some spectator encouragement, perhaps we should drop this discussion.
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