Nokia only sold 330k Lumia in the US


Recommended Posts

He is right.. European carriers have criticized Nokia and said that their phones would been easier to sell if they ran Android.

I never said he was wrong. I was just pointing out the hypocrisy of criticising somebody for not quoting a source, and then in the same paragraph making a statement of fact without a source.

He is right.. European carriers have criticized Nokia and said that their phones would been easier to sell if they ran Android.

Which is bull****, it's not about the customers, it's about the salesmen who are pushing android phones on everyone, the customer doesn't know an android phone from a X6. They buy what you tell them they need. or what the reviewers last said was the greatest. which of course doesn't take "their" needs into account at all. which ends up with tons of people buying the SIII because it has the best specs, meanwhile the inferior Xperia S runs circles around it in pretty much everything, and certainly everything that matters to the customer.

It's a shame. I think Windows Phone 7 is a better designed phone OS than Android.

Well, it was a long string of mistakes, which wasn't helped in the least by their recent "Osbourning" of all currently available phones by announcing there would be no upgrade path to WP8. I don't see any incentive to go out and buy one at the moment.

("But... WP 7.8 will look like WP8!" If it can't run WP8 apps, and it can't, it's an orphaned platform. It's all about the apps.)

  • Like 1

He is right.. European carriers have criticized Nokia and said that their phones would been easier to sell if they ran Android.

All what I could read from that article:

"Blah blah blah the biggest operator, blah blah blah, the biggest operator blah"

Have you ever considered why didn't they once name that "operator"?

Suffering from image and hardware bugs? WHAT?

Also Estonian market is full flat from Lumia's (Except the pink ones :wacko: ), it's a small market yes but that already shows you something.

I don't really see them selling anything other than WP, sure they still have a few Symbian devices hidden in the back but that's not going to get them through the next few years

But simplezz and others in the thread are claiming that Symbian would have saved them?

WP has been a hit... against a wall. If I were in Microsoft management, right now, I would be pretty scared of the "Metro UI-powered" Windows 8 launch in October....

You were spot on right up to the ellipsis. Windows Phone 7 devices have insanely high customer satisfaction ratings, so a bet on WP7 is a heck of a lot safer than a bet on Android fragmentation. The Lumia 900 was sold on one carrier in the US. If they sold it on both AT&T and Verizon those numbers would have gone up considerably. Of course that will get tested if VZW actually carries a full selection of WP8 devices instead of just a single base model like they did with WP7.

Not saved. Keeping them in business while dealing with WP.

Well fact is, Nokia was already going down with Symbian, you know the whole reason they had to do Meego? WP or Android wouldn't have made any difference.

The android market is a mess there is only Samsung who actually makes any money in that market besides Microsoft (licensing) and Google (licensing/royalties).

But simplezz and others in the thread are claiming that Symbian would have saved them?

Let's imagine you have a cruise vessel - now let's imagine two vastly different scenarios:

Scenario I: The captain announces via intercom that the ship is sinking, everyone should run for their lives or gruesome death awaits.

Scenario II: The captain announces via intercom that the ship has run into minor engine problems and they need to make repairs before moving on.

Elop was scenario numero uno.

Symbian would have kept Nokia float long enough for them to get the Meego out the door with a stable framework to publish applications on. Now it's a sinking boat where all the professionals have already left the building and have gone to form a new company - one that I personally expect much more from.

Let's imagine you have a cruise vessel - now let's imagine two vastly different scenarios:

Scenario I: The captain announces via intercom that the ship is sinking, everyone should run for their lives or gruesome death awaits.

Scenario II: The captain announces via intercom that the ship has run into minor engine problems and they need to make repairs before moving on.

Elop was scenario numero uno.

Symbian would have kept Nokia float long enough for them to get the Meego out the door with a stable framework to publish applications on. Now it's a sinking boat where all the professionals have already left the building and have gone to form a new company - one that I personally expect much more from.

Uh No

Actual Scenario: Symbian was sinking.

If you are reffering to the statscounter site you should take a closer look why.

All in all we should just wait until the 19'th to see how the Lumia has worked out for Nokia overall not just the US/UK

The Board and Elop is a team trying to save Nokia. Maybe you need to learn how these companies work before you sprout ridiculous BS

No business sets out to fail. The problem is that Nokia is burning through its cash reserves and the public response to Nokia's WP7 products has been tepid at best. Nokia has basically gone all-in on Microsoft's WP platform and it hasn't paid off yet, which isn't exactly surprising considering that the Lumia range is far from cutting edge.

Nokia went from dominating the market to playing catch-up and it's possible that their current strategy is simply too little, too late. It's not that WP7 is bad per se - it's more that the Nokia brand simply doesn't carry the same value that it used to. Despite Nokia having billions of dollars in cash reserves analysts are predicting that Nokia burn through what cash it has and will be vulnerable to a take-over bid. Nokia used to produce good products but the Lumia range just isn't particularly competitive.

Let's imagine you have a cruise vessel - now let's imagine two vastly different scenarios:

Scenario I: The captain announces via intercom that the ship is sinking, everyone should run for their lives or gruesome death awaits.

Scenario II: The captain announces via intercom that the ship has run into minor engine problems and they need to make repairs before moving on.

Elop was scenario numero uno.

Symbian would have kept Nokia float long enough for them to get the Meego out the door with a stable framework to publish applications on. Now it's a sinking boat where all the professionals have already left the building and have gone to form a new company - one that I personally expect much more from.

Except for the little fact scenario two has been what Elop has done all the time. They're still developing Symbian, they're still releasing symbian devices, heck their new camera is only symbian for now. They announced they where NOT abandoning symbian.

More importantly normal users don't even know about the power struggle. they just know nokia is nokia, and they know that every review int he last few years since Nokia started doing consumer touch phones has said to stay away from them because in 1, then 2, then 3 then 4 iteraions of their OS they are still unable to make a usable touch interface.

No business sets out to fail. The problem is that Nokia is burning through its cash reserves and the public response to Nokia's WP7 products has been tepid at best. Nokia has basically gone all-in on Microsoft's WP platform and it hasn't paid off yet, which isn't exactly surprising considering that the Lumia range is far from cutting edge.

The only ones who care baout uctting edge and specs are reviewers and geeks. heck the best Android phones aren't the cutting edge, as I have said before, Sony's lower spec phones outperform Samsung top end cutting edge SIII phone in OS performance and battery performance. and even Google recognizes that and says Sony is their best partner and the only one who bother to properly optimize the OS and software for their phone hardware.

...the Lumia range is far from cutting edge.

I'm not sure I would say that. Lumia's might not have the latest multi-core processors but they generally outperform anything running Android and don't suffer from the woeful performance issues that that OS exhibits. Also, I can only speak for the Lumia 800 but it's an extremely well made phone using cutting edge materials and manufacturing processes.

Sony's lower spec phones outperform Samsung top end cutting edge SIII phone in OS performance and battery performance. and even Google recognizes that and says Sony is their best partner and the only one who bother to properly optimize the OS and software for their phone hardware.

Source?

I don't think you know what trojan horse means.

Well Nokia was once described my Microsoft as the enemy they wanted to destroy http://www.economist.com/node/1454300

?We want to fend off Microsoft?we don't want to go the way of the PC business?

And Microsoft don't have a great background in partner relationships http://www.theregister.co.uk/2003/01/06/microsofts_masterplan_to_screw_phone/

I never said he was wrong. I was just pointing out the hypocrisy of criticising somebody for not quoting a source, and then in the same paragraph making a statement of fact without a source.

I wasn't criticising him for not providing a source. I was asking for one. Big difference. And I provided you with one when you asked, the same can't be said of the person I was quoting.

That's really hard to believe, since the Lumia 900 was on top of sales chart for several weeks at Amazon. It still is in top 10 (for black only, and combined sales number would be even higher).

we dont know how much it should sell to make it to the top list in Amazon.

it could be just 1000 device a day which makes it to only 60k over a period of 2 months.

and Amazon number can be taken in to consideration since most wont go to amazon to buy phones.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • A different thing with Russia. When you say is it better, depends on things. It is better that we don't have the E.U making rules and laws that have nothing to do with them. Is the trading part better? No, that is really mucked up, but then we knew that was going to happen and we would have make agreements, like we do with other parts of the world. Freedom of movement is certainly better, but could be improved, we still need more control over our borders. do you live in the U.K?
    • So what am I quoting from them? I never listened to what Farage or his cronies said. I wanted the U.K to leave the E.u years before the referendum and it had nothing to do with Farage and his cronies. So what country do you live in? Did we work much better together? We were always at logger heads with the E.U because we disagreed with them so much. Maggie was always on at them. I would have thought the E.U was glad to get rid of us as we stopped the integration or made it a two tier. Now without us they can integrate more. I would not have voted out if it was just a trading block and we can still work together on somethings.
    • MPC-BE 1.9.0 by Razvan Serea Media Player Classic - BE is a free and open source audio and video player for Windows. Media Player Classic - BE is based on the original "Media Player Classic" project (Gabest) and "Media Player Classic Home Cinema" project (Casimir666), contains additional features and bug fixes. The BE mod (Black Edition Mod) is a skinned version of Media Player Classic Home Cinema, much better looking than the plain old MPC. MPC-BE 1.9.0 changelog: Splitters Fixed crashes in some situations. AudioSplitter Added support for the RF64 format. Fixed reading of channel layout for some WavPack files. Added support for ID3 tags for Wave64 files. Unknown Wave64 chunks are now ignored. AviSplitter Added support for 'y408' video. Improved support for 'HEVC' video. FLVSplitter Added support for VVC video. MP4Splitter Improved handling of corrupted files. MatroskaSplitter Expanded support for V_UNCOMPRESSED video codecs. Fixed support for frame rotation (ProjectionPoseRoll). Improved support for "V_MS/VFW/FOURCC / HEVC". MpcDvdVideoDecoder Fixed conversion to YUY2. Fixed display of menus for some DVD-Videos. RoQVideoDecoder Output in NV12 and YV12 formats is allowed. Full range is used. MPC Video Decoder RGB32 format will be output as a top-down bitmap by default. Added support for the "IID_MediaSideDataDOVIMetadataV2" interface. Removed support for the deprecated "IID_MediaSideDataDOVIMetadata" interface. Fixed retrieving the name of the video adapter when using NVDEC. Fixed crashes in some situations. MPC Video Converter Added support for AYUV video format. MpcAudioRenderer Improved input format validation. Optimized retrieval of supported formats for exclusive mode. Added the "Keep audio device active when paused" setting. Fixed crashes and freezes in various situations. Subtitles Added the ability to open the properties of an external subtitle renderer in the "Subtitles" settings panel. Fixed external subtitle connections for VSFilter. Fixed a crash when rendering PGS/SUP subtitles when using AVX2. YouTube Improved support for yt-dlp. The built-in YouTube parser is no longer used. Player The HTTP read strategy has been changed. If the playlist contains one entry, more key combinations can be used to control the player (jump through chapters, adjust volume). Improved support for reading ASX playlists. The translation of the MediaInfo report for Chinese, Korean and Japanese has been removed. Added blocking of 32-bit filter "PICVideo Lossless JPEG Decompressor" (pvljpg20.dll), because it crashes. Added blocking of the system filter "AVI Decompressor", which will eliminate the crash of VFW codecs. Fixed a rare crash when using the "/slave" key. Fixed a crash when getting a list of fonts for OSD. Added the ability to load an external audio file using hotkeys. Fixed opening a network path starting with \?\UNC. The "Determine duration when adding" playlist setting now works for YouTube video URLs. The "Online media services" settings panel has been redesigned. Added a "Merge files using FFmpeg" option to the file saving dialog. This option is activated when playing multiple streams obtained using yt-dlp. Added loading of local .dpl playlists ("DAUMPLAYLIST"). Fixed a hang when the user closes the player during the URL opening process. Various interface fixes. Installer Updated MPC Video Renderer 0.10.5. Updated MPC Script Source 0.2.17. Added MPC Image Source 0.3.6. Translations Updated Japanese translation (by tsubasanouta). Updated Chinese (Traditional) and Dutch translation (by beter). Updated Romanian translation (by Andrei Miloiu). Updated Hungarian translation (by mickey). Updated Turkish translation (by cmhrky). Updated German translation (by Klaus1189). Updated Chinese (Simplified) translation (by wushantao). Updated Italian translation (by mapi68). Updated Korean translation (by Hackjjang). Updated Chinese (Traditional) (by udfbe). Updated libraries dav1d 1.5.3-6-g04b69f9; ffmpeg n8.2-dev-1857-g4653e68aab; libpng git-v1.6.55-9-g7d52a8087; Little-CMS git-lcms2.18-26-gf739cda; MediaInfo git-v26.05-38-g702c9b7fd; ZenLib git-v0.4.41-91-g073f297; zlib 1.3.2. Download: MPC-BE 64-bit | Portable MPC-BE 64-bit | ~20.0 MB (Open Source) Download: MPC-BE 32-bit | Portable MPC-BE 32-bit Link: Media Player Classic - BE Home Page Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Apple reportedly looks to blacklisted Chinese memory chips as RAM prices climb by Karthik Mudaliar Image via Apple Apple is reportedly trying to get a clearance from the Trump administration to buy memory from ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT) to get some relief from soaring DRAM prices. As per a report by the Financial Times, Apple approached the Commerce Department more than a month ago and also spoke to other officials and allies in Washington. For starters, CXMT is a company that's already been placed on the Pentagon's list of Chinese military companies. The Chinese company is the country's top DRAM maker. For Apple, the timing is certainly awkward but not surprising. Tim Cook had recently warned that Apple would have to raise prices because AI companies are buying up large amounts of memory for data centers, and just like that, Apple raised MacBook and iPad prices. Micron also recently revealed that customers have committed billions of dollars to secure memory supply years in advance, which shows us how aggressive securing infrastructure has become. This gives suppliers such as Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron more leverage, while pushing hardware makers to look for alternatives. CXMT is one of those alternatives, but not the simplest one. Apple has spent many years trying to diversify parts of its supply chain away from China, especially for final assembly, while still depending heavily on Chinese manufacturing and suppliers. Even domestic brands from China are moving towards CXMT and YMTC instead of relying on Samsung, Micron, and SK Hynix. For Apple, though, it would invite more scrutiny than local Chinese companies. For now, this is more like a lobbying effort rather than a confirmed supply deal. There's no official statement from either of the parties. What is clearer, though, is the pressure behind such a request. AI demand has certainly made hardware a bottleneck, and companies are trying everything they can to bring things back to normal, even if that means making politically sensitive choices. Source: Financial Times
    • I did test it a month or so back, but ... the results I expect to be on the first page are not there.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Woland13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Woland13 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      bernmeister earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      487
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      221
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      147
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      74
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      70
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!