this post was submitted on 31 May 2025
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[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 days ago (12 children)

Remember Stephen Elop of Nokia’s “burning platform” memo in 2011?

I was entering high school in 2011, so no.

Nokia adopted Windows Mobile as their phone operating system — which failed in the market. Nokia used to own the phone market.

The only real experience I have with Nokia is my dad's Nokia 3310 (which he exclusively uses as an alarm clock these days) and nonstop memes about the 3310's supposed indestructibility. Kinda wild to me that Nokia once ruled the entire goddamn phone market.

Nadella going AI is going to be Facebook going Metaverse at the best.

And at worst...well, by my guess, its gonna be "Microsoft accidentally brings forth the Year of the Linux Desktop"

[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (10 children)

Nokia had great hardware, but crappy software (and I say that as a heavy Series 60 user back in the day). In a parallel world, Windows Mobile could have ridden that hardware to a glorious future, but it was transparent that Elop's acquisition was just part of a Byzantine internal Microsoft play.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 4 days ago

The Burning Platform debacle was huge where I live and I remember it quite well.

It seems that Microsoft was planning on coasting on brand recognition, while the public correctly noticed the lack of any real synergy between Windows Phone and Microsoft's desktop computer software. Nokia's hardware was indeed top notch, but WP lacked a killer app, or indeed most apps at all. It missed the train and developers ignored it in favor of iOS and Android.

I doubt MeeGo would have managed to recapture the dominance Nokia had on the pre-iPhone market, but at least nerds like me would have vastly preferred it.

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