TechWeb: "GSM Based phones can usually be used in many non-U.S. countries."
Bingo!!!
They are still wrangling over it legally. Nokia, refusing to play nice, tried to
go it alone - and failed miserably. Now they are simply doing a cut and run,
so to speak.
Navas then falsely interpreting this as a decline in CDMA is complete horse
crap.
"Apology accepted"??? What an ass...!
"Charles" <fort514@mac.com> wrote in message news:241220061055167563%fort514@mac.com...
> In article <jpudnVfDYurOCRPYnZ2dnUVZ_qfinZ2d@adelphia.com>, George
> <george@nospam.invalid> wrote:
>
>> For sure, Nokia just couldn't make a good CDMA handset and apparently
>> decided to give up trying.
>
> Didn't they go with their own CDMA chip set rather than Qualcomms and
> that was their problem? Nokia's stated reasons for not making CDMA
> phones sounds like sour grapes.
>
> --
> Charles
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