I just talked to the VZW marketing employee that officially announced the Nexus on twitter about launch and she said that she has heard absolutely nothing about launch getting canned or anything along those lines. She told me she would let me know if she hears anything about it. So maybe that's not what Panda meant by "things maybe turning to crap"..... who knows though
I just talked to the VZW marketing employee that officially announced the Nexus on twitter about launch and she said that she has heard absolutely nothing about launch getting canned or anything along those lines. She told me she would let me know if she hears anything about it. So maybe that's not what Panda meant by "things maybe turning to crap"..... who knows though
I think the Panda was talking about the possibility of an early November (the 3rd) release going sour and it has been pushed later in the month to give the Razr/Rezound room to breathe.
I think the Panda was talking about the possibility of an early November (the 3rd) release going sour and it has been pushed later in the month to give the Razr/Rezound room to breathe.
I keep hearing about the bloat and why verizon places it on phones, money. It makes me wonder how much money we are talking about here. Verizon make most of the money on rate plans I would think and may not make any money on hardware after the bills are paid like retail space, commissions and advertising. When I look at my "Blockbuster" bloat app I would guess that like me most people have never opened it. So the question is, how much does blockbuster pay per phone for that to be placed there? Number of handsets X $ (insert price) =$$$ It just doesn't seem like it would add up to that much compared to the RMR of a rate plan. Any ideas on what this equation looks like?
I keep hearing about the bloat and why verizon places it on phones, money. It makes me wonder how much money we are talking about here. Verizon make most of the money on rate plans I would think and may not make any money on hardware after the bills are paid like retail space, commissions and advertising. When I look at my "Blockbuster" bloat app I would guess that like me most people have never opened it. So the question is, how much does blockbuster pay per phone for that to be placed there? Number of handsets X $ (insert price) =$$$ It just doesn't seem like it would add up to that much compared to the RMR of a rate plan. Any ideas on what this equation looks like?
A lot of people have stated that Verizon's strategies are not understandable by the general public, so I have to lump this in with that. Personally, if I have a store and 3 awesome phones to sell in it, I don't space them out. I put them all out on display as quickly as possible and let people start buying them. I give you three great reasons to spend money in my store, not one or two.
One reason why I believe Verizon will push back the release of the Galaxy Nexus is because it's overshadowing the other phones. A quick Google News search over the past week tells the story.
Number of hits (for the past week):
Galaxy Nexus: 42,000,000
Moto Razr: 1,000,000
HTC Rezound: 600,000
Verizon has a huge hit on their hands, but they'd rather push the bloat phones for a variety of different reasons that we've discussed to death. They're making a calculation that people will just quit waiting; however, they're wrong. A lot of people who wanted the GS2 are holding on for the Galaxy Nexus (myself included).
The Galaxy series is one of the best phones in the world and it's coming to Verizon last because they're such a pain to deal with.
I don't exactly hear an outcry from peeps in the Asian LTE markets having the same issues w/ their "next generation" chipsets & battery life, do you? We're further behind than just a generation.
Uh oh. I'm hoping that this person is confused.
At this point I'll be astonished if we see this phone before Thanksgiving. It's not in Verizon's best interest. When something isn't in Verizon's best interest to hell with what the customers want.
One reason why I believe Verizon will push back the release of the Galaxy Nexus is because it's overshadowing the other phones. A quick Google News search over the past week tells the story.
Number of hits (for the past week):
Galaxy Nexus: 42,000,000
Moto Razr: 1,000,000
HTC Rezound: 600,000
Verizon has a huge hit on their hands, but they'd rather push the bloat phones for a variety of different reasons that we've discussed to death. They're making a calculation that people will just quit waiting; however, they're wrong. A lot of people who wanted the GS2 are holding on for the Galaxy Nexus (myself included).
The Galaxy series is one of the best phones in the world and it's coming to Verizon last because they're such a pain to deal with.