NOKIA vs SONY ERICSSON

India
October 31, 2006 9:18am CST
NOKIA vs SONY ERICSSON Who is the best on the bases of FEATURES , LOOK , MUSIC , COST , DURABILITY , BROWSER , SOUND ???? ~~~"NOKIA" or "SONY ERICSSON"~~~
1 person likes this
40 responses
@finidinwa (497)
• United States
1 Nov 06
well thanks for this topic nokia ruls the world
• India
1 Nov 06
till now nokia is winning..
• India
6 Nov 06
ok... nokia win..
• India
5 Nov 06
hey nokia is always winning the race.. no doubt...;)
@hawick (645)
• Singapore
3 Nov 06
SE K750i - My phone
im a Sony Ericsoon user! had nokia phone few years ago, but i prefer SE for the design and functionality and the durablity
@hawick (645)
• Singapore
4 Nov 06
yeah, im comfortable with SE phones. So what phone are u using? Nokia or SE?
• India
31 Dec 06
thank you for sharing with us.... thank you onces again keep replying...
• India
4 Nov 06
Sony Ericsoon great..
@britishyip (1609)
• India
1 Nov 06
Nokia  - enjoy the touch of technology with nokia
enjoy the touch of technology with nokia
• United States
1 Nov 06
thanks for that i commend u
• India
4 Nov 06
me too..
• Indonesia
4 Nov 06
Both have their own features. You can choose NOKIA or SONY ERICSSON, it depends on what you want from a cellphone.
• India
4 Nov 06
ya thats what i'm saying. it depends on the situation. but nyway sony erricson is better.
• India
29 Dec 06
thanks for sharing with us...
• Pakistan
31 Oct 06
k310i - k310i
i love sony ericsson bcoz they offer the same features of nokia in less price!
• India
1 Nov 06
You are right
• India
31 Dec 06
thank you for sharing with us.... thank you onces again keep replying...
• India
31 Oct 06
ya u have a good point...
@sanjais84 (181)
• India
31 Oct 06
nokia is the best
• India
31 Oct 06
yes u r rite... nokia is great... but my freinds r saying in s/w cell... sony ere. is best... that's why i am asking from u...
• India
4 Nov 06
ya nokia is best
1 person likes this
@classact (1394)
• India
22 Dec 06
NOKIA Nokia Corporation (NYSE: NOK) is currently the world's largest manufacturer of mobile telephones, with a global market share of approximately 36% in Q3 of 2006.[1] It produces mobile phones for every major market and protocol, including GSM, CDMA, and W-CDMA (UMTS). The corporation also produces telecommunications network equipment for applications such as mobile and fixed-line voice telephony, ISDN, broadband access, voice over IP, and wireless LAN. Nokia's headquarters are in Espoo, a neighbouring city of Helsinki, Finland, but it has R&D, manufacturing, and sales representation sites in many continents throughout the world. Nokia Research Center, the corporation's industrial research laboratories, has sites in Athens, Helsinki, Tampere, Oulu, Tokyo, Beijing, Budapest, Bochum, Palo Alto, Bangalore and Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. Nokia is by far the largest Finnish company, accounting for about half of the market capitalization of the Helsinki Stock Exchange (OMX Helsinki); a unique situation for an industrialized country. It also plays a very large role in the economy of Finland, and Finns have ranked it many times as the best Finnish brand and employer. The seeds of the current incarnation of Nokia were planted with the founding of the electronics section of the cable division in the 1960s. In the 1967 fusion, that section was separated into its own division, and began manufacturing telecommunications equipment. Since 1964 Nokia had developed VHF-radio simultaneously with Salora Oy, which later 1971 developed also ARP-phone. Fusion of these two companies resulted in 1979 as Mobira Oy and in three years it launched NMT phone. Nokia bought Salora Oy in 1984 and now owning 100% of the company, changed company name to Nokia-Mobira Oy. In 1988 Jorma Nieminen and others started a spinn-of company; Benefon Oy. Year later Nokia Mobira Oy changed into Nokia Mobile Phones and 1991 the first GSM phone was launched.. In the 1970s, Nokia became more involved in the telecommunications industry by developing the Nokia DX200, a digital switch for telephone exchanges. In 1982, a DX200 switch became the world's first digital telephone switch to be put into operational use. The DX200 became the workhorse of the network equipment division. Its modular and flexible architecture enabled it to be developed into various switching products. For a while in the 1970s, Nokia's network equipment production was separated into Telefenno, a company jointly owned by the parent corporation and by a company owned by the Finnish state. 1987 state sold it's shares to Nokia and 1992 name was changed into Nokia Telecommunications. In the 1980s, Nokia produced a series of personal computers called MikroMikko.[3] However, the PC division was sold to ICL, which later became part of Fujitsu. That company later transferred its personal computer operations to Fujitsu Siemens Computers, which shut down its only factory in Finland (in the town of Espoo, where computers had been produced since the 1960s) at the end of March 2000 [4], thus ending large-scale PC manufacturing in the country. Nokia had been producing mobile radio communications technology since the 1960s and later began developing mobile phones for the Nordic Mobile Telephone (NMT) network standard, that went online in the 1980s. Nokia introduced its first car phone, the Mobira Senator, in 1982 and the world's first hand-held NMT mobile phone, the Nokia Cityman, in 1987. NMT was the world's first mobile telephony standard that enabled international roaming, and provided valuable experience for Nokia for its close participation in developing Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM). It is a digital standard which came to dominate the world of mobile telephony in the 1980s and 1990s, in mid-2006 accounting for about two billion mobile telephone subscribers in the world, or about 80% percent of the total, in more than 200 countries. The world's first commercial GSM call was made in 1991 in Helsinki over a Nokia-supplied network, by Prime Minister of Finland Harri Holkeri, using a Nokia phone. In the 1980s, during the era of its CEO Kari Kairamo, Nokia expanded into new fields, mostly by acquisitions. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the corporation ran into serious financial problems, a major reason being its heavily loss-making television division. (These problems probably contributed to Kairamo taking his own life in 1988.) Nokia responded by streamlining its telecommunications divisions, and by divesting itself of the television and PC divisions. Jorma Ollila, who became the CEO in 1992, made a strategic decision to concentrate solely on telecommunications. Thus, during the rest of the 1990s, Nokia continued to divest itself of all of its non-telecommunications divisions. The exploding worldwide popularity of mobile telephones, beyond even Nokia's most optimistic predictions, caused a logistics crisis in the mid-1990s. This prompted Nokia to overhaul its entire logistics operation. Logistics continues to be one of Nokia's major advantages over its rivals, along with greater economies of scale. In 2004, the troubles of the networks equipment division caused the corporation to resort to similar streamlining practices on that side, with layoffs and organizational restructuring. This, however, diminished Nokia's public image in Finland, and produced a number of court cases along with an episode of a documentary television show critical towards Nokia.[5] Despite these occasional crises, Nokia has been phenomenally successful in its chosen field. This growth has come mostly during the era of Jorma Ollila and his team of about half a dozen close colleagues. In June 2006, this era came to an end with Ollila leaving the CEO position to become the chairman of Shell. The new CEO of Nokia is Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo. On February 2006 Nokia and Sanyo announced a MOU to create a joint venture addressing the CDMA handset business. A few months later, in June, both companies announced ending their negotiations without agreement. Nokia also stated their decision to pull out of CDMA R&D, with the intention to continue CDMA business in selected markets. On 19 June 2006 Nokia and Siemens AG announced the companies are to merge their mobile and fixed-line phone network equipment businesses to create one of the world's largest network firms. Both companies will have a 50% stake in the infrastructure company, to be headquartered in the Helsinki area, and to be called Nokia Siemens Networks. The companies predict annual sales of 16 billion euros and cost savings of 1.5 billion euros a year by 2010. About 20,000 Nokia employees will be transferred to this new company.
• India
31 Dec 06
thank you for sharing with us.... thank you onces again keep replying...
@oo7bond (817)
• India
31 Dec 06
thank you for sharing such a cool and great discussion... i love to reply to your discussion keep replying... NOKIA
• India
31 Dec 06
thank you for sharing with us.... thank you onces again keep replying...
• India
12 Dec 06
NOKIA is the best
• India
29 Dec 06
thanks for sharing with us...
@saeedsid (1119)
• Pakistan
30 Dec 06
from my opinion I would consider Sony Ericsson to be the better one as it offers same features as in Nokia with much less price.
• India
31 Dec 06
thank you for sharing with us.... thank you onces again keep replying...
• India
31 Dec 06
Both has its own features that makes them apart from one another..if sony ericsson exels in music and sound quality then nokia exels in their features providing with the symbian os.Nokia is so common and we see a ratio of 3:1 between thw two..Both has adv and dis adv..
• India
31 Dec 06
thank you for sharing with us.... thank you onces again keep replying...
• United States
28 Dec 06
NOKIA
• India
29 Dec 06
thanks for sharing with us...
• India
30 Dec 06
Nokia we have more features and user-friendly but in sound clarity we have to choose sony ericsson
• India
31 Dec 06
thank you for sharing with us.... thank you onces again keep replying...
@tulip85 (60)
• India
30 Dec 06
sony ericsson is btr thn nokia....if u want a music phone...cos sony has gud sound quality. but if u want a phone for basic use nokia is better...gud battery back up...n its rough n tough.
• India
31 Dec 06
thank you for sharing with us.... thank you onces again keep replying...
• India
6 Nov 06
I had been using nokia for 2 yrs and i have had a lot of problems with my set and now i am going for sony ericson...would you please give your feedback on SE Z550i because i want to take that but need your suggestions and feedback before taking it......thanx.
• India
29 Dec 06
thanks for sharing with us...
@mydiego (310)
• Philippines
4 Nov 06
well for me both is good..even the features..but in my country we talk about the price..well nokia is the best seller before of the low price..
• India
5 Nov 06
thanks for replying..
@memonayaz (138)
• India
4 Nov 06
obviously its nokia
• India
5 Nov 06
thanks for replying..
@honest007 (793)
• India
4 Nov 06
Nokia - Nokia
Nokia is great.. great quality.. i prefer Nokia above all..
• India
29 Dec 06
thanks for sharing with us...
@Damiani (236)
• Belgium
3 Nov 06
Euhm: Features: Sony Music: Sony Look: Nokia Cost: Sony is cheaper Durability: Nokia Browser: Hmmm both are good Sound: Dunno, i guess Sony == Sony is the best for me
• India
29 Dec 06
thanks for sharing with us...
• India
5 Nov 06
NOKIA
• India
29 Dec 06
thanks for sharing with us...