Det finns flera källor på hur försäjningen går:
http://www.zdnet.com/blog/cell-phones/at-t-and-amazon-out-of-...
Så att Nokia kommer att överleva är det nog ingen tvekan om.
Är Windows Phone tråkigt? Nja jag håller med om denna sak:
A phone shouldn’t try to be a PC
That might even be Windows Phone’s defining concept. Again, you might not agree with this idea. The iPhone, and Android phones, just extend the standard PC metaphor into handheld devices. Wake the computer up, go to the Desktop, launch an app, spend some time inside that app’s exclusive space, and then either put the computer back to sleep or move to a different app.
When Windows Phone works well, it appears as though you’re running one big mobile app that covers everything you’d ever want to do with a smartphone. Beyond just a consistent UI, I mean. Windows Phone allows you to focus on nouns instead of verbs. It’s a completely different vibe. Once you’ve jettisoned your iPhone or Android verb-driven mindset, you natively start thinking about the person you want to communicate with, and not the app you need to launch in order to make that connection. At this specific instant, I’m the only one who’s shown up for bar trivia and I only care about the group of people who’s supposed to be here with me. Why should I spread my focus across five or six apps? Isn’t it much more sophisticated to keep my focus on the group I’ve defined?
Which brings up another thing I like about Windows Phone: it’s a people-oriented OS. You would correctly assume that I have a close and highly-interactive relationship with my editor. On my iPhone, I can search my Inbox for messages to and from him, check Twitter and Facebook for his postings, and this follow his communications and his activites from space to space without ever leaving this one screen.
In Windows Phone? I just pin him to the Start screen. There’s our email correspondence about this very column; there’s the photos he’s posted to Facebook, and the Tweet to my latest column that he’s recently posted to Twitter. I can get in touch with him in a bunch of different ways . . . and it’s all done through his own tile, If I hadn’t pinned him, he’d still surface in any part of the phone where my social connections are relevant.
Bottom line: Windows Phone’s strength isn’t in hundreds of thousands of the best apps available for any mobile platform anywhere. It’s more about having an important collection of apps that work together better than they can on any other OS
http://www.suntimes.com/technology/ihnatko/11730729-452/can-w...