- Apr 8, 2012
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Should be the same with the same GPU
Thanks. I was hoping for slightly smoother performance on the 830 than I've seen on the 630/635 in stores.
Should be the same with the same GPU
Thanks. I was hoping for slightly smoother performance on the 830 than I've seen on the 630/635 in stores.
Unless you have more money than you ever need, the reviews cannot save the 830, only a pre - release price drop around 40-50% could.
I thought about this in detail in this post: https://medium.com/adventures-in-co...-nokia-lumia-830-not-good-enough-768d45018442
Your entire argument is based on the notion that people only consider raw specifications when choosing a phone, and that raw specifications correlate directly with a product's value. The existence and overwhelming success of the iPhone disproves this, and thus your argument is fundamentally flawed.
The iPhone sells by the truckload at hugely inflated prices on the strength of brand awareness, reputation/image, performance, user experience, build quality etc. The market doesn't care how much RAM it has. Clearly I'm not suggesting Lumia/WP's brand awareness or reputation is a match for iPhone - not yet at least, indeed rectifying this is WP's main outstanding challenge now. On high-end models though I believe Lumias do compete on performance, user experience and build quality, and because of the quality and efficiency of the WP product they are able to achieve this level of performance without needing the internals that their Android equivalents often have, just as the iPhone does.
Personally, given the choice between paying ?300 for a Lumia 830 or ?300 for a Galaxy S-whatever with double the specs but built by Samsung and running Android, I know which one I'd pick.
And as for Apple's offering - well, my ?300 would only get me half a phone.
You have basically two thesises:
1) Apple can over-charge for their hardware, so can Microsoft.
2) Specs are (especially on Windows Phone) not important anymore.
And in my opinion they are both wrong.
Sorry, I probably went to far trying to sum up your pointsI don't know, you seem to have adjusted my argument slightly in your summary, I didn't say either of them things.
Two things:I actually agree with a lot of what you're saying but a lot of it is relevant only to power users and enthusiasts. My argument was simply against your claim that the 830 is bound to 'fail' because of it's specs. The fact is that the vast majority of the buying public don't see it like you do and they haven't got a clue about specs at all. To them the 830 is a perfectly viable alternative to whatever Android has to offer in the same price bracket based on the things they care about, how it looks and feels to use to check your email, text, browse the web etc - they don't know what HDR or 4K video or a Snapdragon 400 is. They do know they love the slick 5" Clearblack screen and sexy metal edge though.
When you say the 830 will fail, you might be right. But the true threat to the its success is the mindshare-ratio that sits massively in Android's favour, naivety about what WP has to offer propagated by sales staff, poor marketing etc etc... not the processor it uses.
409? for SD 800 - 1080p screen - 4k video capture - 20 MP - Lumia 1520
449? for SD 800 - 1080p screen - 4k video capture - 20 MP - Lumia 930
399? for SD 400 - 720p screen - Full HD video capture - 10 MP - Lumia 830
Also you, like many others, are comparing the announced launch price of the 830 with the price you can get a 930 for now, months into its availability, which is obviously wrong.
Why should anyone compare the release prices and not the real, current prices? If I'm now looking for a phone, I have to pay 399€ for a 830 and 409€ for the 1520.
With other words: The 830 is not worth 399? and hopefully will drop fast a lot.
Why should anyone compare the release prices and not the real, current prices? If I'm now looking for a phone, I have to pay 399? for a 830 and 409? for the 1520.
I dunno either. Something about paying a premium to be the first one to own a budget flagship I guess.