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Old November 15th, 2007, 08:27 PM
Ness net
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Default TechWeb: "GSM Based phones can usually be used in many non-U.S. countries."

Piss off John. Absolutely no apology offered - or is needed.

Nokia chose to go it's own way and (try to) develop it's own CDMA chips.
And did a fairly shitty job of it - thus it's just cutting it's losses now because
they did a such a completely lousy job at CDMA on their own.

Certainly, you can spin this, twist reality and believe what you want. Using this
to further push your absolutely bogus argument (CDMA is in decline) is however
completely false and frankly asinine. And again shows how delusional you are.

And, it certainly doesn't change the actual TRUTH.

Which is that CDMA is actually growing, not declining, as you always falsely
contend.


"John Navas" <spamfilter0@navasgroup.com> wrote in message news:u92po2l952oep0ss2q779fn557gj2mvpnr@4ax.com...
> On 9 Dec 2006 10:18:46 -0800, "carcarx" <carcarx@hotmail.com> wrote in
> <1165688326.282543.270550@n67g2000cwd.googlegroups .com>:
>
>>John Navas wrote:
>>
>>> CDMA2000 is actually on the decline, with Nokia having abandoned it,

>>
>>Here're two of Nokia's new phones for VerizonWireless (cdma2000 EV-DO)
>>
>>http://www.nokiausa.com/phones/6315i/0,7747,,00.html
>>http://www.nokiausa.com/phones/6305i/0,7747,,00.html
>>
>>There are more cdma2000 phone on the Nokia USA web site.
>>Look for model numbers ending in "i".
>>So, obviously, Nokia hasn't abandoned cdma2000.

>
> <http://www.mobiledia.com/news/47935.html>
>
> Nokia and Sanyo announced today that they will not be forming the new
> CDMA device company preliminarily announced in February.
>
> The Finnish company said on it would pull out of CDMA phone
> manufacturing, which it sees as a shrinking market in the longer
> term. Recent developments may indicate that the CDMA emerging markets
> business is looking more challenging.
>
> <http://www.networkworld.com/news/2006/081106-nokia-to-lay-off-us.html>
>
> Nokia will cut a few hundred jobs as it shuts down its CDMA handset
> development.
>
> The company has been developing CDMA (Code-Division Multiple Access)
> products at a facility in San Diego but is now turning to ODMs
> (original device manufacturers) for all its CDMA phones. It expects
> to eliminate about 600 jobs in the process, cutting a work force of
> about 1,150 to roughly 550, said spokesman Keith Nowak. In the
> future, the San Diego unit will work with the ODMs and also help to
> develop Nokia GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) and UMTS
> (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) products.
>
> Apology accepted.
>
> --
> Best regards, FAQ FOR CINGULAR WIRELESS:
> John Navas <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Cingular_Wireless_FAQ>



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