Posts tagged N97

Notes

While checking RSS feeds yesterday, I came across one of John Gruber’s many cuss posts. By cuss post I don’t mean bad language but his cussing out something or someone, often with one word and link to source. John used “What a turd” to describe a video comparing Nokia’s N97 promo video against supposedly real world experience (Post title: “Nokia N97 Promotional Video vs Real Life”).

About an hour after seeing John’s post, Betanews founder Nate Mook IMed a link. Someone had IMed a link to him. The video has started to spread across the Web. A search for the video’s title, “Nokia N97: The Truth,” conducted this afternoon brings up more than 40 entries just within the last 15 hours—before appearing links to other stuff. But by quick scan, I’d guess the number of links to the video is quadruple that. When I accessed the video at 2:26 pm PDT today, there were 58,001 views. Right before I posted, the number had jumped to 61,360 (but slowing from yesterday).

The video has gone viral, but it’s strange timing. Why? The video isn’t the least new. YouTube user “nokiatruth” has posted just this one video, and that was on Sept. 5, 2009. Not yesterday, but nearly seven months ago.

The video’s sudden viral spread follows a concept I introduce here for the first time but will make an ongoing topic at Oddly Together: “Mob Journalism.” It’s news generated by the mob, or crowd (not the Mafia). The mob gets ahold of something one of its members deems interesting and widely spreads it. I’ll explain the cultural, sociological and psychological aspects in my first full post on the topic. But suffice to say somebody spreading this stuff searches for acceptance, recognition or money.

There’s a different quality to Mob Journalism—a unified sense of rightness, but not always by everyone, about what’s shared. In this one example, most of the linkers to the video share John Gruber’s disdain. The chain of spreading connections highly influences opinion. Of course, most of the people ridiculing the Nokia N97 has never used one.

I IMed Nate yesterday about the video: “I owned a N97 and that wasn’t my experience. Sure the Nokia promo was exaggerated, but I found the phone plenty speedy. If I hadn’t switched from AT&T, I would still use the N97. Sure, it’s no iPhone.” There are plenty of positive reviews about the N97, and negative ones, too, of course.

Just because many people agree on something doesn’t it true or news. Mob Journalism is where the crowd rules the news. 

Do you have a social media or mob journalism story that you’d like told? Please email Joe Wilcox: oddlytogether at gmail dot com.

Notes

My Nokia N97 is Gone

Snail pic taken with Nokia N97 smartphone
Snail pic taken with Nokia N97 smartphone

I’m mad at Apple and Nokia. Apple has the best mobile software and services platform anywhere. Nokia offers the best hardware platform—granted, HTC closes in. This difference has forced me to choose one company’s smartphone over the other, leaving behind dissatisfaction with the compromise.

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Notes

My Minimalistic Home Office

For weeks, I’ve been meaning to post something about my minimalistic home office. Today, jkOnTheRun’s James Kendrick posted on his “clean minimalistic office,” which got me off my procrastinating butt.

I’ve worked out of a home office for more than a decade. People don’t ask as much about it as they did in 1999, when many fewer people worked remotely. But when there are questions, the first usually is: “How do you keep from getting distracted? You know, watching TV and stuff?”


Pier 1 Import’s Casabelle Mail Center

My response is usually laughter. Distraction to work isn’t the problem. Distraction from work is. It’s difficult to extricate myself from the workday. There is always one more e-mail, IM, phone call or Tweet. I work a longer day at home than I ever would in an office. Ask any successful home office worker, and they’ll admit to the same problem.

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1 Notes

Nokia N97 First Impressions

He's so Cute
Snail taken using Nokia N97 close-up mode

Smartphone design is a series of compromises. It’s about making disparate functions fit oddly together. Engineers must find the best balance so that extended features don’t compromise those of highest priority. A smartphone is still a phone first, and everything else second. There, the Nokia N97 delivers. The audio call quality is simply outstanding. It’s the best I’ve heard or had others hear from any handset—and that’s using a Nokia BH-804 bluetooth earpiece. Several friends described the sound as “lively” and “full.” One person said “rich.”

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Notes

Nokia N97 Value vs. iPhone 3GS

Movin' Along
Close-up of snail taken with Nokia N97

On June 10, I sold my beloved Nokia N96 and the N79 abandoned by my daughter for the E71; the proceeds paid for the N97, which I purchased from Nokia USA. For the price of one N97, I could have bought two iPhone 3GS smartphones with some money left over. My N97 arrived on June 12, seven days before Apple and AT&T started selling the iPhone 3GS.

Why spend so much? As I’ll explain in the next post, on first impressions, the N97 is a mix of well-balanced capabilities packaged oddly together.

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Notes

This is my first photo taken with the hotly-anticipated Nokia N97 smartphone, which I received on June 12. My 14 year-old daughter anxiously waits to board a plane from Long Beach, Calif. to Washington, D.C.
Do you have a photo story that you’d like told? Please email Joe Wilcox: oddlytogether at gmail dot com.

This is my first photo taken with the hotly-anticipated Nokia N97 smartphone, which I received on June 12. My 14 year-old daughter anxiously waits to board a plane from Long Beach, Calif. to Washington, D.C.

Do you have a photo story that you’d like told? Please email Joe Wilcox: oddlytogether at gmail dot com.

Notes

Many gadget reviewers will unfairly compare the Nokia N97 to the iPhone 3GS. They would be wrong to do so. Such reviews compare two things that poorly fit oddly together.
The iPhone is not the gold standard by which all other smartphones are measured. Too many reviewers dismiss other excellent smartphones, such as the Palm Pre, simply because they don’t have the same features as iPhone. Duh, of course they don’t have the same features. Competition is about differentiation. The N97, like the Pre, offers benefits that are different from iPhone. None of these smartphones necessarily appeals to the same buyers. Nor should they.
Not everyone needs or should want to buy an iPhone. Other smartphones charm in their own way. If the manufacturers have done right, other handsets will offer something different, and hopefully better.
The N97 should have broad appeal, with benefits and features either not found on iPhone 3G/GS or offered weakly by the device(s). Some example N97 benefits:
QWERTY keyboard
Stylus for writing characters
Richer, livelier audio call quality
1500mAh 3.7v removable battery
Running background applications
Persistently connected applications
5-megapixel camera (Carl Zeiss lens)
Dual-LED flash (for camera and video)
Unlocked phone (in the United States, anyway)
Do you have a smartphone story that you’d like told? Please email Joe Wilcox: oddlytogether at gmail dot com.

Many gadget reviewers will unfairly compare the Nokia N97 to the iPhone 3GS. They would be wrong to do so. Such reviews compare two things that poorly fit oddly together.

The iPhone is not the gold standard by which all other smartphones are measured. Too many reviewers dismiss other excellent smartphones, such as the Palm Pre, simply because they don’t have the same features as iPhone. Duh, of course they don’t have the same features. Competition is about differentiation. The N97, like the Pre, offers benefits that are different from iPhone. None of these smartphones necessarily appeals to the same buyers. Nor should they.

Not everyone needs or should want to buy an iPhone. Other smartphones charm in their own way. If the manufacturers have done right, other handsets will offer something different, and hopefully better.

The N97 should have broad appeal, with benefits and features either not found on iPhone 3G/GS or offered weakly by the device(s). Some example N97 benefits:

  • QWERTY keyboard
  • Stylus for writing characters
  • Richer, livelier audio call quality
  • 1500mAh 3.7v removable battery
  • Running background applications
  • Persistently connected applications
  • 5-megapixel camera (Carl Zeiss lens)
  • Dual-LED flash (for camera and video)
  • Unlocked phone (in the United States, anyway)

Do you have a smartphone story that you’d like told? Please email Joe Wilcox: oddlytogether at gmail dot com.

Notes

Yesterday, I received the Nokia N97. My first impression is “WOW.” This is the cell phone—eh, smartphone—I always wanted. I posted an unboxing set on Flickr. The many features fit well but oddly together.
I am at odds with the Boy Genius Report’s N97 review, which posted same day I received the smartphone. Many people who might otherwise have purchased the N97 won’t because of BGR’s somewhat negative reaction. I’m a huge BGR fan, but not of this review, which finds hardware faults where there aren’t any. Nokia Experts review, posted today, is much closer to my experience using the N97.
Do you have a smartphone story that you’d like told? Please email Joe Wilcox: oddlytogether at gmail dot com.

Yesterday, I received the Nokia N97. My first impression is “WOW.” This is the cell phone—eh, smartphone—I always wanted. I posted an unboxing set on Flickr. The many features fit well but oddly together.

I am at odds with the Boy Genius Report’s N97 review, which posted same day I received the smartphone. Many people who might otherwise have purchased the N97 won’t because of BGR’s somewhat negative reaction. I’m a huge BGR fan, but not of this review, which finds hardware faults where there aren’t any. Nokia Experts review, posted today, is much closer to my experience using the N97.

Do you have a smartphone story that you’d like told? Please email Joe Wilcox: oddlytogether at gmail dot com.

Notes

Quick Quotes: June 9, 2009

[Editor’s Note, March 29, 2010: For about six weeks during summer 2009, and following my April 30 layoff from eWEEK, I put out my shingle as an independent analyst. I had worked as an analyst for JupiterResearch from 2003 to 2006. But the role just didn’t feel right, particularly given the economy. This post represents a feature of “quotes” for journalists to use in their stories.]

Today’s installment begins with Bing, Nokia N97 and Microsoft’s new GM of US Distribution and Services. They’re my quick take on the day’s news.

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