(or: why Nokia gets trounced in the U.S.)

I have a healthy amount of respect for Nokia.  Before the iPhone they were the only devicemaker offering half of what Apple now offers with the 3GS.  Indeed, I toted a Nokia N95 for a while, and an N81 8GB for a while.  Both were excellent phones, but I’m convinced now that Apple’s iPhone, even as it arrives as a better all-around phone than Nokia’s current flagship (the obviously Blackberry-inspired N97), is more appealing to American consumers because it is made by an American company.

That’s right.  Nokia’s brand is obscurely perceived in North America, particularly the U.S., as an upscale European oddity not unlike Fiat or Porsche, to use an automotive analogy.  So while it may be the number one brand globally, Nokia has failed to make an impression on American consumers precisely for the reason that they’re a non-American company.

Apple owes a helping of its iPhone success to that fact.  The product is American; the company is American; the marketing is overwhelmingly American, with sitcom-style television commercials, extremely stable revision control (how many models of phone does Apple have on the market compared to Nokia?), and a least-common-denominator hardware engineering approach that appeals to the maximum number of simultaneous consumers instead of offering a specific style or feature set to five or six different niches.  Fewer buttons, more software.

The other American-friendly thing about the iPhone is the nature of its name.  Nokia is some Scandinavian meme as Sony is some Japanese one.  The difference is that Nokia’s name hasn’t been overcome with a mass-market product the way Sony’s cross-cultural name has been with the Playstation, and earlier, the Walkman. Same with Nintendo.  Who didn’t have a Nintendo Entertainment System in 1990?  And for that matter, who doesn’t have a Wii today? Far fewer carry a Nokia product than own a Wii in the United States.

But there’s more to it that the brand name. Say what you like about Nokia’s lack of good carrier support in the United States (Apple still has only one official carrier), or their botched execution of an application store model (Apple a lot to harm themselves on the appstore anyway), the real problem with Nokia’s phones isn’t the name on them.  It’s the way they look and feel.  While the majority of American consumers still haven’t obtained a smartphone, the daunting physique of a Nokia N81, for example, could give a buyer pause.  The lack of fluidity of form in Nokia’s products means that the user is exposed to as many features as possible, whether or not they want to use them, and perception is that there’s a long learning curve.

To the degree that the iPhone is simple-to-use, Apple has more or less beaten Nokia by exploiting that one shortcoming. Forget about the crummy app store, the weirdly-perceived brand name, and the GSM-only carrier support for a moment.  Nokia needs to embrace the “downrightly simple” mantra that had early adopters falling all over themselves trying to lay hands on an iPhone. Indeed, if it weren’t for AT&T’s customer retention strategy, Apple may’ve sold twice as many iPhones as they have.

But then, I believe most iPhone sales occured at Blackberry’s expense, not Nokia’s–and that, of itself, does not bode well for the European giant.

iPhone killer? Maybe?

New N-Series flagship? Definitely.

With a full Qwerty keyboard and a bent towards social networking, the N97 will certainly outshine the iPhone in at least some respects.  Among the new Nokia’s features are persistent network connections–something iPhone apps have been locked out of by Apple for “performance reasons.”

It’s curious that Nokia’s announcements keys so heavily on social networking, something that Apple has more or less ignored over the years. (Remember .Mac?  That was Apple’s idea of social networking I think.)  Location-based social features are something Apple has used in their TV ads for the iPhone, but the app they use in the ad (Loopt) isn’t allowed a persistent connection, limiting its usefulness.

Now, if the N97 is as usable as the iPhone and hits retail at a price point that folks can swallow (Symbian UI has nothing on the iPhone in my opinion), then this could be a serious hit.  I’m looking forward to trying one out.

What can I say, I love both the N-Series phones (except the dorky N73) as well as the iPhone, so my decision about whether the iPhone is better comes down to one thing: hassle-free ease of use.  Wondering whether I chose the iPhone or the Nokia?  Read on.

Here are some random photos from the Fort Myers / Naples area.   A few of these were taken using a Nokia N81 8GB.

In the industrial ecosystem of mobile, Nokia views Google as bigger threat to its international dominance than Apple.  Perhaps this is because Google’s vision of the wireless apps industry is one of open access and “nothing hidden”, while Apple’s is one of backroom handshakes and lopsided, scroogy contract deals.  It’s no wonder Nokia is opening the door on the Symbian Foundation, an organization which will unify and promote the use of Symbian mobile OS technology in the future.

So I looked into my inbox today, exciting reading through a message introducing AT&T’s “new” MyMediaNet service, a web service portal for smart phones running on AT&T’s network.  I was expecting to be able to add all my favorite RSS feeds and POP/SMTP accounts into the MediaNet portal (the Symbian mail client sucks after all). So I rushed to set it up.

It didn’t meet my expectations. I got to choose from approximately 20 pre-packaged “more of the same” content sources and the only customization seemed to be the order in which the top 5 appear on my phone. No RSS. No mail (unless you call Yahoo Mail mail).

So unless you’re elderly or still bother with content sources like CNN, don’t bother with this “new” feature.

About two weeks ago I began receiving calls from “Private No.” on the Nokia phone I’ve been using. At first I thought nothing of it, until these calls began to increase in frequency. It peaked a couple of days ago, when I received 55 such calls in ONE DAY.   I know the fundamental spam-resistance technique: don’t answer it.  Of course, sheer morbid curiosity got the best of me. I had a few words in mind for these mumbling, non-English-speaking nimrods that keep leaving me indecipherable voicemails.  These voicemails sound like people talking in the background as opposed to actually talking to me.

So when I answered the call, the guy said some crap I couldn’t understand and managed to stay with me on the call for all of about 8 seconds before hanging up.  When I’m in a meeting and I get 12 calls in a row, I look like a dweeb. I have to do something to silence my ringtone, so I dump the incoming private calls to voicemail. The other option would be to turn off my phone, but I just can’t afford to do that.  What’s worse, when these morons go into my voicemail, they’re paging me and leaving me voice messages. The SMS page notifications I receive as a result incur SMS usage, which equals $$$ out of my pocket, sucks my phone memory, and creates a REAL nuisance. We’re talking 20 – 30 voicemails and 20 – 30 text messages every day.
Now here’s the real crap of it: AT&T says they “cannot block private calls”, period, end of story. How idiotic is that? Privacy management out to be the hallmark feature of a usage-based system like AT&T’s cell phone service. This is why companies like Iotum, GrandCentral, and TalkPlus are getting so much attention. They allow you to manage *more* of your own privacy than the cell phone companies do.

Problem is, I already use one of these services and I’m still getting Private No. calls, because the spamming caller isn’t dialing my GrandCentral number–they’re dialing my direct cell phone number. I cannot change my cell number because many of my clients use it to get a hold of me. My number is already on the national Do Not Call list (I registered it even though I shouldn’t have to since it’s a cell). Automatic callback to the private number doesn’t work.
It dawned on me that I should be able to turn my private call ringtone to silent with no vibrate, but as it turns out, this phone won’t let me do that either. So I started investigating call-blocking add-ons for the Symbian OS that runs on my phone. Haven’t been able to find anything yet.  Any Symbian lovers out there know of a good solution?

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