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Re: Eldar: Nokia and Microsoft Discussing WP7
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Compared to Android, WP7 would likely be a more lucrative short term endeavour - MS would pay a nice bribe to get their platform deployed, and WP7 is probably technically better than Android (this is speculation on my part - but why would it make sense to release something technically worse, when MS has all the money in the world?). |
Re: Eldar: Nokia and Microsoft Discussing WP7
I think Windows Phone 7 is so different from Symbian or Maemo that switching to that OS will be a big financial gamble.
Will satisfied Maemo or Symbian users buy a Windows Phone Nokia in the future? I think that a lot of them will not, hence a big gamble. Producing phones based on WP7 in addition to Symbian (and possibly MeeGo/Maemo) is much more likely option. WP7 is different enough and the microsoft brand might provide Nokia a way to grow in the US martket. |
Re: Eldar: Nokia and Microsoft Discussing WP7
seems like eldar finally found a contact to find real stuff to smoke.
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Re: Eldar: Nokia and Microsoft Discussing WP7
Frankly, Nokia does superb hardware but poor, poor software. I think them looking for an OS that delivers is the way to go, if not for main feed at least as a backup. And I know WM isn't exactly gold now, but MS is big and committed and if a partnership is reached WM could be tuned to the hardware pretty well.
If anything, Nokia needs to establish a relationship with an OS that is young and malleable and backed by a large company. Intel's solution isn't a bad choice, but it may or may not work well. Having a backup is far from bad from any standpoint. And frankly, WM might kinda suck now but it's too young to call and, if history has taught us anything (by us I mean Windows developers) is that MS work is well documented, with examples and a huge user base. I know I'm preaching to a select OSS crowd but it's not so bad, really, from developer and user standpoint. Not too good if you look to admin a Linux machine, though. On the good side, actual navigation. Oh, and, they aren't doing damage to MeeGo. People who make the distinction from Linux to Windows will have a choice and those who don't would have bought anyway. They'll see how it goes and favor the winner. It's bad business to put all your eggs in one OS. I, for one, welcome out new MS overlords. |
Re: Eldar: Nokia and Microsoft Discussing WP7
I cannot see this in a thousand years.
This is Eldar pulling the chain of all the blinkered American "tech" blogs who cannot understand, see, or believe in anything that did not originate in the USA. Therefore, the concept of dumping a OS such as Android or WP7 on nokia hardware gets those blogs creaming with excitement, because they do not understand Nokia's ideas. Apart from anything else Nokia has been investing heavily in services over the last few years, such as Ovi music, Maps, etc. The future profits lies in those services, and not hardware or OS, as they are both becoming commoditised as the PC market has done. Just look at the range and variations within the Symbian phones to see what I mean. Nokia can churn them out cheap and with countless small variations. That is a massive plus as it enables Nokia to tailor phones for every corner of the world. With the services and OS, Nokia is taking on Google/Microsoft, and HTC with the hardware. Nokia are playing a long game. Quite aside from the fact that symbian3 has just been launched on phones in the last few months, and Meego is just around the corner in 2011. I think 2011 will be a milestone year for Nokia if they get it right, which I think they will. |
Re: Eldar: Nokia and Microsoft Discussing WP7
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M$ isn't about making sense or great products - such concepts only get in the way of maximizing corporate value and getting large bonuses. It's about making $$$. If something makes more $$$ then it IS technically better in the M$ kinda way. I feel the urge to skip around, sweat profusely and chant 'Developers, devlelopers, developers...' |
Re: Eldar: Nokia and Microsoft Discussing WP7
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Niklas Savander himself said in an interview that Nokia won't adopt neither Andoid nor WP7 Quote:
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Re: Eldar: Nokia and Microsoft Discussing WP7
The problem with this nauseatingly bad rumor is that it makes perfect sense
in the context of bad business management reactions as a response to less than stellar financial returns. And even if it goes nowhere it reeks of a kernel of truth. As a general rule (there are slashdot discussions on this) business management almost always ends up in the hands of people who by the very virtue of their profit-oriented acumen know very little about what it is the business actually does. Managers (particularly at American companies - I know) are generally chosen for their sheer ignorance of the nuts&bolts in order to avoid falling prey to 'inventor management' syndrome and its pitfalls. These are two the two extremes of business management: knowing zero about the product or knowing too much (and consequently being infatuated by hardware and blind to economic realities). Nokia management has probably decided they were too close to the ground and are buying into the American ideal of more 'management by ignorance' and less management by innovation. We see evidence of this in their lack of resolve to stick to the business model. Bad management is always accompanied by fundamental flip-flops as evidenced by the recent changes at Nokia. Abandon Symbian - oh wait, maybe not! Abandon Maemo - it is maturing too well and is attracting hackers Abandon hacker-ridden Meego and take up Micro$oft Wait a moment - maybe we should reconsider Android now? I have seen too many companies fail in my industry :( and the symptoms are all too familiar. First comes a bit of economic turbulence, then comes some management tumbling gyros then they seem to get it all together but the core competence is gone: They sell off the technical cream in favor of better basic profits. After that moment all that is left are the vultures who, in another lifetime, would ordinarily be selling used vehicles on a vacant lot somewhere on the rough side of town. Being profit-driven is not a problem as long as you stick to your technical business principles with a steady resolve. When you discard your technical excellence in favor of crude profit then all is eventually lost. Not this moment today, not even this quarter but very quickly the threads that hold a company together begin to unravel. Someone please turn out the lights when you leave Nokialand... |
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