Nokia's N-Gage - Savaged By Online Opinion 68
Thanks to CNN for their column discussing how the Internet has changed the way 'bad' products are viewed, with reference to Nokia's N-Gage 'mobile game deck'. The columnist argues: "Ten years ago you might have quietly withdrawn [an 'awkward' product] from store shelves", but times have changed: "The Internet provides an instant, widespread referendum on products... And the Net crowd, for obvious reasons, tends to eye high-tech products. But the things that do get interest, usually negative, watch out." He then gives the immensely popular, N-Gage-related Side Talkin' site as an example of this backlash, quoting a Nokia spokesman as saying of the site: "It's better to have some reaction than no reaction at all."
Imagin (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Imagin (Score:2)
Re:Imagin (Score:2)
What older gadgets could this have affected? (Score:5, Interesting)
Think back a few decades about some of the crap you may have bought. Then think about - had you been able to read instant online opinion about the gadget - you may not have purchased the product.
Virtual Boy? NeoGeo? Would VHS have lost to Betamax?
Re:What older gadgets could this have affected? (Score:3, Insightful)
Would Windows be more popular than Linux?
Personally I always got most of my information by talking to people who knew more shit than me.
Re:What older gadgets could this have affected? (Score:2)
If you can tell the difference between good advice and bad advice, you don't need advice.
Re:What older gadgets could this have affected? (Score:1)
Re:What older gadgets could this have affected? (Score:1)
Whoa there boy (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory PA Links :) (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory PA Links :) (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory PA Links :) (Score:1)
It was a joke.
First of all, of course I did not buy an N-Gage.
Of course.
Second of all, you forgot an 'e.'
That was another joke.
Third of all, use Slashdot's search function to look for all stories involving Nokia's N-Gage. Those Penny Arcade links have been posted plenty of times before. Why do you think you needed to post them again?
I didn't post them, sahrss did.
I realize you may be new here so I'll cut you some slack.
Cut me slack how exact
Re:Obligatory PA Links :) (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory PA Links :) (Score:1)
By that logic, so are you.
Re:Obligatory PA Links :) (Score:1)
If I say, don't post these links. That is not encouraging people to post the links. If you defend the person who posts the links, that is encouraging someone to post the links. Honestly, you must be really stupid.
Re:Obligatory PA Links :) (Score:1)
You don't understand human nature very well, then.
You're an idiot if you think that follows from my statement. Are you a woman?
That is completely sexist and very insulting. Perhaps we should explore why you are such a misogynist, hmm?
If I say, don't post these links. That is not encouraging people to post the links.
Not true. It also doesn't help the situation. You just end up looking like a whiney brat. Ahh, but y
Re:Obligatory PA Links :) (Score:1)
Thanks for playing but you lose.
Re:Obligatory PA Links :) (Score:1)
Only this account is new. I've been reading /. since 1998.
Thanks for playing but you lose.
No, dipshit. You lose.
Re:Their own world. (Score:2)
Let's face it. Even if we don't have the true numbers of how many N-Gages have actually been sold to living, breathing, spending customers, it's pretty apparent that the thing has less support than the N64 (which most people felt was a failure, es
Re:Their own world. (Score:2)
Profitability isn't the only measure of success...especially when a company loses market share in a business where they previously dominated.
Re:Their own world. (Score:1)
Re:Their own world. (Score:1)
Turkish kid? (Score:2, Funny)
Hit the nail on the head (Score:1)
Boy, Nokia higher-ups must be glad that the editors decided to post that story here then!
Opinion is just as baseless. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Opinion is just as baseless. (Score:3, Interesting)
Do they really need to, though? I mean, it even looks stupid on paper, and just about every gaming magazine that's covered it has passed that on to all of their readers. You don't really need to experience the operation of removing your phone's battery just to switch game cartridges to know that it is a ridiculous process, especially in the public areas where you would use your N-G
Re:Opinion is just as baseless. (Score:1)
Red Faction: Truly awful. There's just no way to port a PS2 game to a hand-held console. While it does look va
Re:Opinion is just as baseless. (Score:3, Interesting)
Product reviews exist so that people don't always have to waste time and money on something they find out later is crap. Because of reviews, I didn't have to waste money buying Daikatana when it came out, nor did I run out to buy a Yugo.
Of course,
Lets obviate the fact ... (Score:2)
Because of course to be 12 years old makes you somehow completely "stoopid" and unable to have a valuable opinion about the aesthetics of a gadget.
Re:Lets obviate the fact ... (Score:2)
I've seen a couple of real people using these on the street here in NYC, and it looks just fine, you hold it as you would a regular landline phone receiver.
Not that I think this will succeed, at least not this generation of hardware. Their undoing will
Re:Opinion is just as baseless. (Score:2)
It can't be ignored that video gaming is essentially part of pop culture for 12-year-olds. A well-formed argument from a gaming scholar is as influential as a knee-jerk opinion from an Entertainment Tonight quack.
This is one area where Nintendo has historically done well. Regardless of technological aspects of the NES/SNES/N64/GC, they strive to make it really cool and interesting, first, and use all sorts of marketing tools from Nintendo Power to fla
Re:Opinion is just as baseless. (Score:1)
And Playing Tomb Raider on that thing is like trying to do neurosurgery with the Jaws of Life. Ugh.
Re:Opinion is just as baseless. (Score:2)
Re:Opinion is just as baseless. (Score:3, Informative)
So everybody was just making up the $300 price tag and the need to remove the battery to insert new games?
Re:Opinion is just as baseless. (Score:2)
But it was a bad product. (Score:1, Informative)
Nokia should have *ASKED THEIR TARGET AUDIENCE* about it and taken their opinions seriously. Besides the game loading problem and the sideways talking: it uses an anti-widescreen format and has useless features (3D hardware is useless on a portable - games can't really be
Re:But it was a bad product. (Score:1)
It's all done in software rendering, hence the low framerates.
The Internet has only changed the time it takes (Score:4, Interesting)
"Back in the day" people might have bought lousy products initially, but after The Word eventually got out, people didn't continue buying them. Staying with the topic of videogames, the Sega Saturn didn't need the Internet to die. Nor did Virtual Boy (dear god, it didn't need help to die...)
There have been topics in the past about how text messaging and cellphones are killing opening weekends for movies because the 'bad word' gets around faster. It's causing bad movies to be known for their badness earlier but, eventually, people will learn products aren't good.
Even in the days before the 'net.
-Trillian
Re:The Internet has only changed the time it takes (Score:1)
> the Internet to die.
It was not lack of quality on the hardware. It was not lack of quality on the software. It was not Sega's rivals. No, it was Sega of America, led by that Bernie Stolar moron, that killed the Saturn!
They did not release in USA many awesome games (Radiant Silvergun, Grandia, Thunder Force V, Castlevania, the Sakura Taisen series, and a lot of shoot-em-ups), or the RAM expansion that allowed Capcom to make pixel-perfect ports of their arcade fighting games
Slightly off topic... (Score:1)
Re:Slightly off topic... (Score:2, Funny)
The short answer. (Score:2)
The long answer: thers is none.
Re:Slightly off topic... (Score:2)
3 weeks = 100$ price drop? What? (Score:1)
...when the price drops to like twenty dollars.
Re:3 weeks = 100$ price drop? What? (Score:1)
It's an interesting device even if you're not interested in playing games, it's the cheapest Series 60 Symbian phone on the market although the lack of a camera does diminish its appeal.
As a pocket sized permanently networked computer it's certainly an interesting proposition.
Wow, I was wrong... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wow, I was wrong... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Wow, I was wrong... (Score:1)
This is good, is it not? (Score:5, Insightful)
Never before has this been possible. An individual, at virtually zero cost, can now express their opinion about the acts of a corporation or their products. Prior to the explosion of the internet, the only "people" with a voice loud enough to be heard by the buying public were those that had enough financial backing to fund such a publication. That included a very short list of a) corporations, such as the one that is selling the product in question, and b) large media organizations, which are also corporations. The problem is that "a" is clearly and understandably biased -- as their only responsibility is to profit off of their own product. Unfortunately, so is "b", as the very economic viability of traditional media is co-dependent on the health of a commercial marketplace, and the advertizing dollars that support it, thus implying an inherent and unavoidable conflict of interest. While there remained the possibility that a subscriber-based review publication could remain bias-free, that only acts in the interest of those that are able and willing to pay for the unbiased report -- i.e., a small enough minority that it does not protect the general population.
But here we have an environment in which a very minimially funded voice (i.e., a private individual) can easily make themselves heard to those who want to listen. Thus the tens of millions of advertising dollars invested by the product manufacturer can be trumped by pennies invested by the masses.
In the end, what does this mean? It means that the corporation will be forced to adjust to a new market. Period. Sure, there will be court battles regarding free speach vs. trademarks and ip claims, etc., etc. But ultimately, the corporations that adjust fastest, rather than those fighting the customer, will sell more products and thus grow healthier and stronger than those that do not adjust. And those healthier corporations will be marketing products that are driven directly by consumer desires. This is a good thing for the consumer, is it not? Can you think of a counterexample, where the ultimate needs of the masses were better known by the corporation than the masses themselves?
Note that I am not saying that there are not situations in which small, informed bodies can actually make better decisions for the majority than the majority itself. However, should those decisions not be relegated to a democratically elected body -- i.e., government?
Of course, the trend of free, instantanious information dissemination across a broad spectrum of the internet tends to democracize corporations over time, thus further blurring the lines between the corporation and the government itself. A parallel, of course, being drawn with the advent of inexpensive publishing via the printing presses that drove the governments themselves toward democracy.
And, like the risk of the democracy, the needs of the few can be lost in the desires of the many. So as corporations function more like a democratic government in the age of self-publishing, we can learn from the problems inherent in such governance when looking to the future problems we will face with corporations.
Sounds like... (Score:1)
the cluetrain effect [cluetrain.com].
Dorks, geeks; big deal? (Score:2)
Weren't people about twenty/thirty years ago saying that only nerds used computers, later followed by social outcasts on the internet? Weren't video games 'just for kids' less than twenty years ago?
Twenty years from now, talking to all-in-one-watch-sized-PDA-GPS-positioner cell phones hybrids will be considered "dorky", using anything slower than a 1 GB/s to connect to the internet will be considered "old school", and kids who play play with Gi-Joe toys will be