Ovi Store event on 19th of March in Mountain View, California

Published by Tzer2 at 23:03 UTC, March 13th 2009

Nokia will be holding a four-hour question and answer event for publishers and developers interested in the  upcoming Ovi Store on-phone content shop. The registration link and more details are available below.

OVI Store event in the valley

March 19, 2009
Time: 2pm - 6pm
Nokia Mt. View Campus
313 Fairchild Avenue
Mountain View, CA 94043


An Ovi Store Introduction.

Have something to sell? Looking to reach a global audience? Interested in porting your product to world-leading mobile platforms? Join us for an afternoon of networking and learning, and get answers to these types of questions and more.

Please contact:

Rosalin Faramarzi-Rad
650-273-2736
rosalin.faramarzi-rad@nokia.com

Registration:

http://mktools.forum.nokia.com/invitation/OVI?mode=register


 

Filed: Home > News > Ovi Store event on 19th of March in Mountain View, California

Platforms: Series 60, S60 3rd Edition, S60 5th Edition

Categories: Software, Developer, Industry, Events

News Discussion

Iain 117
I'm sorry but in my view until operators start including unlimited data usage with all tariffs then I don't see any store being as popular as the appstore, the fact that iPhone users can just hit the appstore icon and browse without having to worry about hdden charges makes the experience much more user friendly and popular, anyone agree?
Tzer2
Iain 117, you're mistaken on so many levels:

1. Some iPhone users DO have to worry about hidden charges, because Apple does not actually have unlimited data tariffs everywhere. For example here in Finland the iPhone's data tariffs are capped, with charges for anything over the limit, unless you choose the most expensive iPhone plan. This is very unusual as most phone plans in Finland include unlimited data, so presumably it's the operator Sonera trying to milk iPhone users for every cent they can get because they have the iPhone exclusively. And that exclusivity is entirely the fault of Apple.

2. Apple did not invent the concept of unlimited data tariffs. Operators all around the world (including the United States) had already been offering unlimited access plans for many years before Apple even entered the phone business. I have had a flat-rate uncapped data tariff on my phone since 2004.

3. Apple does not have the monopoly on unlimited data tariffs, in fact most phones with unlimited data tariffs are non-Apple devices. I have a Nokia 5800 with an uncapped flat rate data tariff for example.

4. You don't actually need mobile data AT ALL for an app store to work. The iPod Touch accesses the same app store as the iPhone, yet the iPod Touch has no mobile network access whatsoever. All you really need is Wi-Fi, and practically all current smartphones now have Wi-Fi. Even people with high data charges could buy their apps at home through wi-fi at zero cost.

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