Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 25th Jan 2013 14:20 UTC
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RE[6]: Comment by Stephen!
by cdude on Sat 26th Jan 2013 14:33
in reply to "RE[5]: Comment by Stephen!"
P4S was a dead proposition by the time Zune came out. No one was taking it seriously
And how is that now different from there newest rounding error market share? It isn't and you just confirmed that the software is the problem, not the hardware. So do european carriers who where very verbose in suggesting Nokia to make a Lumia running Android.
I don't think Windows Phone has a hardware issue. OEMs produce for the most part superb phones.
Finally we agree on something. I too think its the software and not the hardware that is the problem.
Edited 2013-01-26 14:37 UTC
RE[7]: Comment by Stephen!
by Nelson on Sat 26th Jan 2013 17:40
in reply to "RE[6]: Comment by Stephen!"
And how is that now different from there newest rounding error market share? It isn't and you just confirmed that the software is the problem, not the hardware. So do european carriers who where very verbose in suggesting Nokia to make a Lumia running Android.
I don't think the software is the issue either. Windows Phone has one of the highest satisfaction ratings across any ecosystem. There simply is an awareness problem and retail channel issue, which is slowly being solved as carriers grow more faith in Nokia.
A year ago VZW turned Nokia down for a flagship, this year, VZW will carry a Lumia flagship. The brand is beginning to solidify.
If you cant see the bigger picture, that's on you, but also according to you Nokia is supposedly dying after having two solid financial quarters.





Member since:
2005-11-29
Again, if I were talking about it from that point of view he might have a valid comparison (Even then he wouldn't, because P4S was a dead proposition by the time Zune came out. No one was taking it seriously).
The Surface Phone is at this point an unconfirmed rumor. It remain to be seen what Microsoft will do there, but I have reservations. I don't think Windows Phone has a hardware issue. OEMs produce for the most part superb phones.
Very different from say, the PC OEM market.
I doubt Microsoft shields there partners. Specially not if they are of very less value for them any longer. The Apple vs Samsung case was about rounded corners, hardware. Unrelated to Microsoft's software on say Lumia.
You shouldn't doubt. Microsoft has been extensively indemnifying OEMs for a very, very long time.
Microsoft and Apple have agreements in place already. Apple wont sue Microsoft just like they wont sue Nokia. They'd get beat back into oblivion with a pretty powerful bunch of patent (both software and hardware in Nokia's case.)