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To: sense who wrote (38)8/13/2012 2:40:42 PM
From: Lahcim Leinad  Respond to of 580
 
If apps remain on cellular when they should be on Wi-Fi, they could potentially rack up huge mobile data charges for a user.
Don't know about you, but that article makes me happy I walked away from the iPhone to the Nokia 808 PureView, whose settings make this impossible to happen to me.



To: sense who wrote (38)8/13/2012 3:19:28 PM
From: Lahcim Leinad  Respond to of 580
 
More importantly - seems almost official - the new iPhone will come to the party way before the new Windows one.

Better late than never may not apply, in this case.

A few weeks of insane new iPhone hoopla all over the planet may make people shut out the Windows noise.

Windows Phone 8 Launch Date Pegged for September



To: sense who wrote (38)8/14/2012 8:21:44 AM
From: Lahcim Leinad  Respond to of 580
 
Hmm. Seems to me I found a case (pun intended) where Apple is aping Nokia's success:

Months ago, the red Nokia 808 PureView came out and keeps flying off the shelves as fast as they can make it:



Today, Apple apparently set to launch a red-colored iPhone Bumper (Update: Now for sale) | 9to5Mac | Apple Intelligence:




To: sense who wrote (38)8/14/2012 8:51:39 AM
From: Lahcim Leinad  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 580
 
Here is the key difference between Apple under Jobs - not sure it's still that way under Cook - and Nokia.

Nokia just finished a survey:

Nokia poll finds consumers prefer keyboards on smartphones | ZDNet

Here is what Jobs had to say about polling the public:
When asked what market research went into the iPad, Jobs replied: “None. It’s not the consumers’ job to know what they want…we figure out what we want. And I think we’re pretty good at having the right discipline think through whether a lot of other people are going to want it, too.”

Crazy, right? Being the market research aficionado I am, I found this quote particularly surprising. But it makes sense if you think about it. Apple’s team of highly skilled designers and innovators is the target market for Apple’s products. If they create a product that they themselves would use, there’s a good chance that the rest of us will like it too. Second, many of Apple’s products are disruptive technologies, meaning their products create new markets that no one could have predicted. If Apple showed their iPad to a focus group before people knew they wanted tablets, it’s likely that the feedback would not have been very useful.
Pre-market NOK now a penny above where I took my pizza and beer profit off the table: $2.51 -0.10 (-3.83%)