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I have collection of some Ericsson models like R310, T68m and T39. Ericsson will remain forever in my heart
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Posted: 2011-10-30 08:58:04
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as a fan, how come you never posted anything, including pics, in the
///Ericsson Forum?
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Posted: 2011-10-30 09:05:42
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On 2011-10-29 21:01:26, Bonovox wrote:
Well,at this time to remember Ericsson/Sony Ericsson I have changed my Avavtar to one of my all time favourites the K800i. I had it in silver & was the longest time I ever had a phone. I think I may still buy an old
mobile to keep for nostalgic reasons!!
i could give you a nice deal if you want more than one!
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Posted: 2011-10-30 12:45:41
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On 2011-10-30 09:05:42, masseur wrote:
as a fan, how come you never posted anything, including pics, in the
///Ericsson Forum?
not only in this forum
but many others
i read more than i write
i hardly write till i feel the need to do so
as now , i feel so sad not to see the name of ERICSSON on a mobile
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Posted: 2011-10-30 14:04:03
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I wonder what it would take for Ericsson to start making phones again (and all the other things related).
As a true Ericsson fan (member of the Esato Eriteam) its my duty try this, and i hope my fellow Esato members here will join me on this almost impossible quest.
making yourself heard (in life)
[ This Message was edited by: bart on 2011-10-30 16:47 ]
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Posted: 2011-10-30 17:47:27
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honestly... give it up!
by all accounts they have included all relevant patents in the sale so what more can they offer... surely by doing so they themselves realise they are out of the mobile phone business
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Posted: 2011-10-30 18:04:38
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lol this thread is so sad
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Posted: 2011-10-30 18:55:21
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Ericsson still makes platforms, they are still working behind the screens.
After then T68m their was a prototype called the RX1 its something like the smartphones we see today.
still has some aces in hidden somewhere underneath a pile of prototypes.
I promis if i should win the lottery (a few times) i'll buy
and bring back the glory that ones was
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Posted: 2011-10-30 19:45:34
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On 2011-10-30 19:45:34, bart wrote:
Ericsson still makes platforms, they are still working behind the screens.
After then T68m their was a prototype called the RX1 its something like the smartphones we see today.
still has some aces in hidden somewhere underneath a pile of prototypes.
I promis if i should win the lottery (a few times) i'll buy
and bring back the glory that ones was
i don't think that any one doubts that they are able to do it
but these days its so much more then hardware
they would still need a partner for content (like amazon)
and its really hard to shine in the masses of android smartphones
i personally think that its only possible to be successful in todays market, if your goal is either to beat apple in every possible way(thats like fighting against a shark with a spoon) or to look for new markets which haven't been discovered yet
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Posted: 2011-10-30 22:27:17
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On 2011-10-30 19:45:34, bart wrote:
Ericsson still makes platforms, they are still working behind the screens.
After then T68m their was a prototype called the RX1 its something like the smartphones we see today.
still has some aces in hidden somewhere underneath a pile of prototypes.
I promis if i should win the lottery (a few times) i'll buy
and bring back the glory that ones was
The problem is that in today's mobile phone market it seems not the hardware manufacturers but the software makers (Google, Apple, Microsoft) dictate how a phone should be. In essence, we have lost the mobile phone, in its place we now only have pocket computers which is basically just a GUI based touchscreen, where Angry Birds come first (less entertaining than an old Nintendo Game&Watch), and voice communication is merely an afterthought (try making a call using a virtual keypad that I can't blind touch or see under bright sunlight). They all look the same to me, most aren't even designed to work with a charging stand (when the battery only lasts a day), and not very exciting to be honest.
What made old
phones so great was their attention to detail. I have a Crackberry Bold 9700 from work and my last smartphone was an HTC Nexus One, neither of them could give me the joy of using my
R520m (namely the great voice quality, useful minute minder, Bluetooth implementation that can actually transfer an entire address book, a proximity sensor that is functionally practical, and the stylish lightning copper goes really well with my orange car
). Everyday I use either an
R520m, T39mc, or T68m, and will continue to do so until they bring down the GSM network.
[ This Message was edited by: krayzie_cat on 2011-10-31 01:07 ]
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Posted: 2011-10-31 01:55:03
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