I am an ISP provider in Nigeria and planning to deploy WiMax in one of the big cities, how can one get this Nokia Tablet to sell to my customers in Nigeria
I am an ISP provider in Nigeria and planning to deploy WiMax in one of the big cities, how can one get this Nokia Tablet to sell to my customers in Nigeria
Nokia should realize that what mobile users want is a real computer in your pocket. That means make it first functional in size that is with a true touch type keyboard NO thumb type, then make it as slim and small without degrading touch type. I think a 3.5 x 7.5 x 1" would be great, thinner than 1" would be fantastic.
Another problem with Nokia is they use operating systems that the main stream does not use, they use Symbian (Psion) or Lynux. Face it we all use MS so Nokia stop being so cheap. If you do a better job at understand the right form factor you can outsell the competititon; their profits are more based on that versus licence fees.
Nokia should realize that what mobile users want is a real computer in your pocket. That means make it first functional in size that is with a true touch type keyboard NO thumb type, then make it as slim and small without degrading touch type. I think a 3.5 x 7.5 x 1" would be great, thinner than 1" would be fantastic.
Another problem with Nokia is they use operating systems that the main stream does not use, they use Symbian (Psion) or Lynux. Face it we all use MS so Nokia stop being so cheap. If you do a better job at understand the right form factor you can outsell the competititon; their profits are more based on that versus licence fees.
Another problem with Nokia is they use operating systems that the main stream does not use, they use Symbian (Psion) or Lynux. Face it we all use MS so Nokia stop being so cheap. If you do a better job at understand the right form factor you can outsell the competititon; their profits are more based on that versus licence fees.
- what Nokia should do with mini tablet
- by primaz June 24, 2006 1:16 PM PDT
- Nokia should realize that what mobile users want is a real computer in your pocket. That means make it first functional in size that is with a true touch type keyboard NO thumb type, then make it as slim and small without degrading touch type. I think a 3.5 x 7.5 x 1" would be great, thinner than 1" would be fantastic.
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(8 Comments)Another problem with Nokia is they use operating systems that the main stream does not use, they use Symbian (Psion) or Lynux. Face it we all use MS so Nokia stop being so cheap. If you do a better job at understand the right form factor you can outsell the competititon; their profits are more based on that versus licence fees.