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Nokia's Bad Call on Smartphones
Wall Street Journal ^ | July 18, 2012 | ANTON TROIANOVSKI and SVEN GRUNDBERG

Posted on 07/20/2012 8:18:42 PM PDT by PJ-Comix

More than seven years before Apple Inc. AAPL -1.63% rolled out the iPhone, the Nokia team showed a phone with a color touch screen set above a single button. The device was shown locating a restaurant, playing a racing game and ordering lipstick. In the late 1990s, Nokia secretly developed another alluring product: a tablet computer with a wireless connection and touch screen—all features today of the hot-selling Apple iPad.

Former Nokia designer Frank Nuovo says the company had prototypes that anticipated the iPhone.

"Oh my God," Mr. Nuovo says as he clicks through his old slides. "We had it completely nailed."

(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: apple; invention; ipad; iphone; nokia; telecom
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To: Spktyr

I loved playing the built-in bowling game on Nokia phones, until I realized that they rigged it so you could never bowl a 300 Game.


21 posted on 07/20/2012 10:01:21 PM PDT by dfwgator (FUJR (not you, Jim))
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To: PJ-Comix

Apple presented what is called a “disruptive technology”, and it caught on. Who’s going to disrupt Apple and with what? Steve and his craziness are gone, what’s, who’s next?


22 posted on 07/20/2012 10:02:50 PM PDT by Revolting cat! (Bad things are wrong!)
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To: dfwgator

That wasn’t the only Nokia game that was rigged.


23 posted on 07/20/2012 10:22:28 PM PDT by Spktyr (Overwhelmingly superior firepower and the willingness to use it is the only proven peace solution.)
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To: PJ-Comix

Nokia spent much money when the inferior WAP based browsing came out. Then came G3 and G4 and the iphone at the same time and the rest is history.

I remember using browsing cell phones with touch screen 2 or 3 years before my peers who would mock me using a “sidekick phone” while they retained their standard crappy num pads. Then all of a sudden the iphone came out with the G3 network, and I do not know what happened, but all of a sudden they all bought “sidekicks” and droids and iphones. I don’t know what Apple did that I did wrong in advertising that kind of tool.


24 posted on 07/20/2012 10:24:37 PM PDT by JudgemAll (Democrats Fed. job-security Whorocracy & hate:hypocrites must be gay like us or be tested/crucified)
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To: PJ-Comix
10 years ago Nokia had the best phones. Plus they were ubiquitous. Nowadays I hardly ever see them.

I brought mine in 2002 and I am still using mine. It's been through the washing machine 3x and the river twice. The * key doesn't work but other than that it still works great including getting great reception & sound quality.

I don't need another toy to waste time on so I'm not upgrading anytime soon

25 posted on 07/20/2012 10:47:21 PM PDT by qam1 (There's been a huge party. All plates and the bottles are empty, all that's left is the bill to pay)
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To: Revolting cat!

It’s going to be a while. Apparently Steve left 5-10 years of “disruptive tech” ideas behind him.


26 posted on 07/20/2012 10:57:00 PM PDT by Spktyr (Overwhelmingly superior firepower and the willingness to use it is the only proven peace solution.)
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To: PJ-Comix
There are a million stories like this in consumer electronics.

In the 90's I had a prototype of a Tivo like device in my living room, we called it the VNR or VDR for Video Network Recorder or Video Disk Recorder.

It with a Motorola 68040 based set-top box. Some ex-Apple guys wrote the operating system and proprietary hardware accelerated video codec.

The device could either record to its internal hard drive or to the hard drive of a PC or Macintosh over ethernet. The ethernet could also be used to share the PC's internet connection and CPU power for encoding to the box.

It worked and it worked great, especially married to a Pentium class PC. You could either program it with VCR plus codes from the remote or using a desktop application and an online TV Guide. Among its features was purging commercials (to preserve valuable disk space of course), it could also record music and recognize and catalog songs with the internet connection. You could also import music from CD's using the PC's CD-ROM drive.

The product sat complete for more than a year as management dithered over shipping it. They feared litigation and while our counsel was confident they would prevail over Hollywood in court it was decided it wasn't a worth the trouble for such a niche product - they also thought the networking feature was essential and would be impossible to support. One executive beta tester complained his wife threatened to hang him with the ethernet cable he ran clear across the house. All they have to show for the effort is a few patents.

During this period the Apple guys were hired back by the recently returned Steve Jobs and people scattered to other projects.

At the end of 2001 Tivo had an install base of more than 300,000. The underlying platform of our device was installed on a couple cruise ships to deliver pay-per-view and unceremoniously abandoned a short time later.

27 posted on 07/21/2012 3:37:04 AM PDT by WalterSobchak2012 (I have nothing to offer Mr. Romney but silence.)
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To: PJ-Comix
My daughter easily spent $1000 on faceplates for that thing, she seemed to buy a new one every couple of days.

I eventually rationalized that buying her a RAZR would save money because there were no faceplates for it.

28 posted on 07/21/2012 3:41:37 AM PDT by WalterSobchak2012 (I have nothing to offer Mr. Romney but silence.)
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To: PJ-Comix

Anybody remember the Nokia 3310?

Yep. First cellphone I purchased after moving to Asia. As I recall I later regretted ‘upgrading’ to something else.


29 posted on 07/21/2012 4:17:35 AM PDT by expat1000
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To: martin_fierro

It’s got that first generatiom iBook toilet seat thing going on, so even here they’re Apple derivative. Hate on Apple all you want, but where would The PC, laptop and cellphone be without them? Hard to say, since looking like an Apple product is so ubiquitous.

Apple has quite the knack for nailing not just the software, user interface and hardware, but the whole widget from an industrial design standpoint, to the point that once Apple weights in, everyone else has a “duh” moment, throws in the towel and starts copying them.


30 posted on 07/21/2012 4:29:23 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: PJ-Comix

We had the cute little Nokia 8210 that came out in ‘99 I think. One of their earliest internal antenna models. One red, one blue. Never could get much reception with either of them.

I was at the airport once and all these people are walking around talking on their phones. Mine? No service. So, I just walked around talking into it anyway so people wouldn’t think I was a loser.

It might have been the provider, Cingular. I couldn’t get service when I could see their antennas. Took it to the store several times and they just scratched their heads. Cingular blamed the phone. The phone didn’t have anything to say.


31 posted on 07/21/2012 7:08:04 AM PDT by Right Wing Assault (Dick Obama is more inexperienced now than he was before he was elected.)
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To: PJ-Comix

http://somecontrast.files.wordpress.com/2007/11/1941392596_34aaf7dae6_o.jpg


32 posted on 07/21/2012 7:10:39 AM PDT by Right Wing Assault (Dick Obama is more inexperienced now than he was before he was elected.)
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To: Strategerist

At least I know that there are other old people reading FR.

I would guess that in many industries, especially the dynamic ones like computers/electronics, many game changers have died in the lab because management didn’t pull the trigger and get it out. And also, there are many interesting ideas which shouldn’t be brought out. (Next?)

When it’s good enough, but not perfect, you’ve got pot odds.


33 posted on 07/21/2012 7:26:00 AM PDT by Blagden Alley
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