jscottdanceandcheer
New member
We just don't agree. I don't think "Cingular" is the wild-card here. It is:This is a brand spankin' new phone. New form-factor. Problems are to be expected.All reports I've heard and seen have been of problems that are much more likely hardware than software. To me it almost feels like you selectively ignore those. To be fair, the initial reports I heard were from guys who actually worked with the phone at Cingular and may have had ego tied up in blaming Nokia, but their descriptions did not sound branding-related and it didn't sound like they were branded phones even. More recent reports have continued on that same vein.There are no other Series 60 American carriers right now. By the same standards you're applying, you could claim that American frequencies are at fault, for example.The sample size of unbranded Nokias in the U.S. is rather small. And I have heard and read a lot about troubles getting them running. Perhaps it's that same selectiveness in your reading, but check out the Opera Mini forums for example on those types of woes. Perhaps they can be made to work reliably, but considering the smaller sample size, they account for a disproportionate amount of the apparent support woes.I could understand your viewpoint if other U.S. carriers (yes, the U.S. market is the discussion) carried Series 60 more successfully or if Nokia was successfully selling the N75 or N76 right now any where else. But neither of those is the case.