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Nokia (July 2007, Week Vol. 28)

One Does Phones Another Wireless
Jul-20-2007
LIKE SEVERAL OTHER writers, I watch both Nokia and Motorola produce mass market products. I also watch the end results and know that it will be a strange occasion to discover Motorola vanquishing Nokia in any mobile telephony segment. I think it's down to one core reason: Nokia does phones well and Motorola does wireless infrastructure well. Market results seem to suggest you cannot top both categories at the same time. Nokia has the mobile phone market, selling more than one billion phones to date. I kick around with the Nokia N70 in the photo. My cat likes it better than any other phone I've owned. I have owned several Nokia handsets costing more than EUR 500 each. I made my decisions based on form factor and business usage requirements. Motorola products didn't even make the short list. I've owned several Motorola phones. One had the most durable finish I've seen for pub operations--you could slide it across the floor, through the Guinness and under the feet of a nearby table and it still held its connection. Another was a EUR 400 fashion statement that my dog ate one evening. But every year, I buy Nokia phones because they fit my needs best. And I know friends with different needs that buy Nokia as well since Nokia's lineup of phones fills complete walls of many Irish mobile phone shops. I've visited Helsinki and walked the Nokia campus. The place oozes with trendy things and if you avoid getting clipped by the ruthless cyclists, you will see the secret Nokia sauce. It is Nokia's supply-chain management. Nokia's logistical processes pummel the rest of the competition. At a product launch next week, I'll stun someone from Nokia PR by dropping a Nokia N95 in front of them. It's an old trick and normally results in me getting to keep the phone I've just damaged. That aside, the evening gig shows Nokia doing something Russ Beattie consistently underlines--Nokia connects with developers, advocates and niche specialists. When dealing with Motorola, I can talk to the tech guys or the marketing people. I don't get to speak to someone who understands the use case scenarios for the phones themselves. Maybe I'm not on the correct calling list when it comes to talking to the proper specialists. Maybe Motorola's key players work out of time zones an ocean removed and that's the reason for the European disconnect. Maybe something else has ensured Nokia remains at the top of the pile for business phones, multimedia phones and phones that take the hardest knocks when tossed into school lockers or slid across pub floors. Nokia now has 37% of global sales according to Gartner and even with the iPhone's launch, Nokia will probably gain another three percent market share. These numbers have risen from 28% in 2004. I think Nokia will do these numbers. Their low-end phones are in most college backpacks that I see at work. Their tablets are the buzz of the moment at Irish tech groups and on mainstream podcasts. Nokia has spanned wide swaths of the market and its handsets appeal to a highly diverse international demographic. Both of these strategies make the company resistant to seasonal fluctuations or new market entrants like the iPhone. Next month, Nokia invites people to Go Play with its most expensive mobile phones, its home entertainment solutions and its accessories. Although those kinds of show-and-tell occasions do little to excite me, they show Nokia works proactively to attract and engage its customers and advocates. Is such a practise too difficult for the other brands?
Nokia N70 PAYG Mobile Phone ?75.99
Jul-19-2007
The Nokia N70 mobile phone features a 2 megapixel camera with flash, Bluetooth, media player, email client, 30MB Built-in memory...
Nokia N800 Navigation Kit
Jul-17-2007
The Navigation Kit for the Nokia N800 Internet Tablet provides you with the tools to turn the portable Web browser into a personal navigator, but its true potential is stymied by an unintuitive interface and lack of features.
Nokia N95 - the ultimate geek phone
Jul-18-2007
The definition of optimal performance. 5 megapixels. DVD-like quality footage. Carl Zeiss optics. Access music, emails and advanced web browsing with GPS mapping. Upload photos to Flickr, download movies. It is not one thing; it's many. This is what computers have become? The Nokia N95
Nuovo aggiornamento per N95
Jul-15-2007
Oggi, contestualmente all’aggiornamento della Nokia PCSuite ?? partito anche il download del nuovo firmware per il Nokia N95, non so se ?? una vera e propria novit??, la mia macchina windows ?? stata spenta per circa 2 settimane per?? la cosa mi ha stuzzicato l’interesse e la voglia di aggiornare. Per la precisione si tratta [...]
Transferring contacts to your iPhone
Jul-21-2007
I was using a Nokia 6680 phone for the last few months. When I got the iPhone, I realized that transferring contacts to it is a two-step process: first, I had to transfer all the contacts on the Nokia 6680 onto my Windows Address Book (over Bluetooth, thankyouverymuch), then I had to fire up iTunes [...]
Nokia: Lesson Learned, Reward Reaped
Jul-20-2007

"Does [the iPhone] knock Nokia off its perch?"

Offering products for every corner of the market is paying off for the mobile-phone maker Pop singer Alicia Keys and Ramkishen Pyarelal, owner of a Mumbai tea stand, wouldn't seem to have much in common.

LugRadio Guadec party, Thursday evening 8pm
Jul-17-2007
The LugRadio team present??? Guadec attendees party! Thursday 8pm The Hill, Bennetts Hill Free beer! (not all night, though, we???re not Nokia)
So there you have it
Jul-17-2007
Best comparison of an iPhone and a Nokia phone. Seriously, whoever thought a “smartphone” can do without copy-paste?