See, the thing is Nokia is playing a smart move (in my opinion) as they provide a different flagship to each of the different consumer types, which helps them to drive sales as people who want a camera would go for the 1020, those looking for a phablet would get the 1520, those wanting the best processor would hit the 930 - all at an affordable price.
Now think of 128GB SD Card support (any SD card can run on any phone though), 32GB of internal memory, 41MP PureView with dual lenses, Xenon Flash, 4000mAh battery, 5inch screen, QHD Display, a S404 processor, 3D gestures and imagine the price of this 'FLAGSHIP' and about how many people who are actually gonna buy it and use it for all the purposes it's intended to. That is what we call a niche device, not a flagship.
If you want a great camera, great battery, large screen and decent processor - 1520
Ultimate camera, decent processor - 1020
Best processor, great camera, decent battery, great display - Icon/930
I don't get what you people are clamoring for?
The priciest phones come at around Rs 50k (in India) and that is like a lot of money. Convert it to your currency and see what I mean.
What am I "clamouring" for? I'll tell you. I am clamouring for the same consistency in Nokia as per the other manufacturers. What do I mean? I mean that from cheapest to most expensive, there is an incremental and progressive increase in features. So from cheapest to most expensive, the camera goes from 5mp to 41mp, the processing goes from 500mb RAM to 2GB RAM, the storage (phone + SD ) goes from 8GB to 144GB, PPI goes from about 250 to about 450 etc, etc, etc.
Not features jumping all over the place so that I have to choose what features I want in a phone and compromise on something else. Every model Nokia is a compromise on something. And it's absolutely laughable too that for eg, some higher end phones don't have SD whilst lowly cheap models like the Lumia 520 have 64GB SD card storage plus 8GB in phone storage. Can you not see the ridicuolusness of this? The upcoming latest model 930 will have less than half the storage of a phone that's been out for a while now, a phone with a lowly dual core processor that costs about a quarter of this new model.
What you guys are suggesting that Nokia has something for everyone is not true. Not even close. If Nokia did as the other manufacturers did, there would still be something for everyone. If you couldn't afford the flagship, you can still get a midrange phone or a lower end phone that still takes good pictures, has a good amount of storage, has a fast processor etc. What some of you are sticking up for is a compromise. Buy the 1020 for a camera, buy the 1520 for the battery life, buy the 930 for the latest procesor.
I already returned a 1020 and fortunately got my money back. If I want a phone for that 41mp camera, I still want removable storage, I still want quad core processing, I still want a large battery. The mobile phone market is incredibly competitive. I don't honestly believe that Nokia can go it their own way, as some of you say, and succeed. The Lumia 520 has been one of the world's greatest successes in that price range because of 2 things:
Affordability
The amount of overall features for that price.
The 520 is a complete package. It takes good pictures, has plenty of storage with SD card, has built in navigation, Nokia mix radio etc. No compromise for a budget phone. When I spend 4 and 5 times the amount, I expect the same. I don't expect that I have to pick and choose what I can have and what I have to do without.
I consider myself to be Nokia/MS fan and even I am looking sideways at some other upcoming phones to consider replacing my current Nokia. If all this compromising and picking and choosing what I can have and not have in their pricier offerings is making me consider other phones and platforms, what is it going to do to the casual phone buyer who is not a fan of Nokia and MS, and is just looking to buy the best phone with all the best features for the price?
I love the combination of Nokia and MS and even I am frustrated. That says a lot. I bought a 1020 and the combination of a woefully small capacity battery and ageing dual core processor on a largish screen gave it a terrible battery life. So if I want great battery life I can buy something that is just too big (1520) for me and go without the 41mp camera. Or I could buy the 930 for the best processor and get a moderately sized battery and again, miss out on the 41mp camera. On the 1020 and 930 I don't get SD storage. So the only option I have of having removable SD card storage on a new model Nokia phone if I find the 1520 too large to lug around is the new 630/635 and have plenty of storage but go back to a 5mp camera.
And to top it all off, the glance feature only recently released is not avaliable on a brand new "flagship" phone.
Yeah, this is great business. This is most definately not Nokia having something for everyone. This is compromising.