Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 10th May 2010 14:55 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 423974
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RE: iPhone can't be a winner
by Neolander on Wed 12th May 2010 16:21
in reply to "iPhone can't be a winner"
Nokia however is proof that a single company can dominate long in the mobile phone market, so Apple will remain strong, but they lost a chance to create a monopoly in mobile markets. Maybe they need more models. If they continue restrict themselves to a single device (I don't count iphone variants as separate models), Android will just have 20 of them on the same shelf and sell better. OTOH, Apple has a significant loyal user base, so it will continune selling well.
Well... In my opinion, nokia succeeded for such a long time because they know how to provide people with a large variety of cheap and robust phones with an OS which doesn't absolutely suck.
Cheap samsung phones proved to mean "fragile" for me and my friends, while cheap LG phones often had an horrible buggy and/or unintuitive OS. Only SE and Nokia knew how to make good cheap phones for quite a long time, AFAIK. And since, until recently, cheap phones totally ruled the mobile market...
Edited 2010-05-12 16:25 UTC




Member since:
2006-01-17
Massive number of Android models available will certainly decrease Apple's market share. So cheap vs. quality - most people are cheap and prefer cheap, especially if the look and feel is similar (a plain glass screen so software makes a difference). App store and all the locking in tricks won't help, Android gained much already and will be well covered by application availability. Problem for Apple is that their strategy was based on being a better package/product than competition, but that no longer holds.
Nokia however is proof that a single company can dominate long in the mobile phone market, so Apple will remain strong, but they lost a chance to create a monopoly in mobile markets. Maybe they need more models. If they continue restrict themselves to a single device (I don't count iphone variants as separate models), Android will just have 20 of them on the same shelf and sell better. OTOH, Apple has a significant loyal user base, so it will continune selling well.
MS also wants a piece of the cake, using same patent troll tactics as with the Novell, but I doubt anyone else will pay except the HTC, which doesn't need another trial right now.