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Nokia admits mistake on its website relating to the Nokia Lumia 920

0. phoneArena posted on 13 Oct 2012, 10:51

IF you've seen Nokia's website and noticed that the Nokia Lumia 920 is slated to run over the AWS 1700MHz band, you already might have started daydreaming about running an unlocked model over T-Mobile's unlimited network; better forget your dream because it is all a mistake made by the Finnish manufacturer...

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1. jubbing posted on 13 Oct 2012, 10:57 9 4

The good thing is that you can work LTE in Australia, then move to the US and continue using the LTE (cept T-mob)

2. Reverence posted on 13 Oct 2012, 11:14 5 17

so many mistakes aint gud

3. jubbing posted on 13 Oct 2012, 11:23 21 8

Could say the same about your spelling, and grammar. ;)

4. BillyG posted on 13 Oct 2012, 12:05 13 7

his spelling and grammar won't cost you EUR 650

5. jubbing posted on 13 Oct 2012, 12:41 11 2

Something he probably could have used to go to school instead. Still cheaper than an iPhone.

9. Altair posted on 14 Oct 2012, 12:49 1 1

iPhone 5 itself is a big mistake and it costs more than LM 920.

- failure maps
- failure camera (problems with light source)
- scratchy (premium) material used in it
- about 4 other reported problems
- Apples style to explain all problems as features or "you are holding it wrong" or " you are aiming it wrong".

At least Noka always agrees problems and handles them correctly.

6. Joshing4fun posted on 13 Oct 2012, 13:23 1

Just when ya thought you were gonna be able to escape the midrange lineup of tmobile phones. Nope. I hate exclusivity contracts. They hurt consumers and manufacturers alike. The ONE X could have done great on Verizon and others. And the same will go with this phone.

7. Jonathan41 posted on 13 Oct 2012, 14:06 1

Yeah, I never really thought exclusive deals were the best idea. I'm sure companies have their reasons (money) but, in the long run exclusive deal seem to come at the expense of sales (money) so it doen't really seem to pay off. I don't really know how it works though so maybe it does but, I would think that you would want your phone on as many carriers as possible considering that the competition (iPhone/SG3) has made their phones available on just about every major carrier. Just sayin'.

10. lubba posted on 14 Oct 2012, 22:05

Nokia trying to role model after the first iPhone. They should know this is not back in the day. And you would think they learned a thong or two from the L900. By the way, did it even pass the million mark?

8. RapidCat posted on 14 Oct 2012, 04:20

again? this is bad

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