MTM, can you explain why? After all, they would be serving their customers best by selling a device that does what their customers want.
I believe it's technically possible to have a near "perfect" phone with a contemporary feature set if they roll out consistent updates. The n95 could have been it if they'd adopt an iPhone type strategy of cross the range updates, because the hardware is quite good (aside from the lack of a touch screen), the software just needs bug fixes and tweaks.
Instead there are different firmware versions for every version of the n95, leaving many deficient and compatibility within the same product line an issue.
It must be very costly to have a product team for 10 different products, I am sure Nokia could make good money and serve their customers better (building strong loyalty rather than "I'll see what Sony has next time") by focusing on three or four lines to address different needs (obviously with modifications for the carriers), but not 15 completely different products, or however many they have now.
You'd think smartphone users would be more discerning, after all they're paying as much as you'd pay for a fully upgradeable and expandable notebook computer, but it seems like most are resigned victims of these policies. With the competition from iphone, gphone, etc and the general convergence of the handheld as a computer hopefully it will improve and so many people aren't left with devices that just about do what they want.
“The general size and shape certainly calls forth memories of the Centro, but while the previous version was chunky and playful, the Pixi comes off more like its distant cousin... from the year 3000.”
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MTM, can you explain why? After all, they would be serving their customers best by selling a device that does what their customers want.
I believe it's technically possible to have a near "perfect" phone with a contemporary feature set if they roll out consistent updates. The n95 could have been it if they'd adopt an iPhone type strategy of cross the range updates, because the hardware is quite good (aside from the lack of a touch screen), the software just needs bug fixes and tweaks.
Instead there are different firmware versions for every version of the n95, leaving many deficient and compatibility within the same product line an issue.
It must be very costly to have a product team for 10 different products, I am sure Nokia could make good money and serve their customers better (building strong loyalty rather than "I'll see what Sony has next time") by focusing on three or four lines to address different needs (obviously with modifications for the carriers), but not 15 completely different products, or however many they have now.
You'd think smartphone users would be more discerning, after all they're paying as much as you'd pay for a fully upgradeable and expandable notebook computer, but it seems like most are resigned victims of these policies. With the competition from iphone, gphone, etc and the general convergence of the handheld as a computer hopefully it will improve and so many people aren't left with devices that just about do what they want.