Showing posts with label received. Show all posts
Showing posts with label received. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2014

, , , , ,

1 million Nokia X pre-orders received in China? Maybe not


Yesterday, we reported that the brand new Nokia X had received 1 million pre-orders in China - the world’s largest mobile market. Nokia China bragged about this on Weibo, a local Twitter-like microblogging website. However, this might not mean that 1 million customers are ready to buy the smartphone.

As LiveSide.net points out, these 1 million pre-orders were made on JD.com, a hugely popular Chinese online store that apparently allows registered customers to pre-order a product without committing to purchase it. Moreover, users have been lured into hitting the Nokia X pre-order button by a contest that lets one of them win the new Android-based smartphone for free. So it seems that these are more like pre-registrations rather than pre-orders.

Of course, since the Nokia X is really cheap - $97 (or 599 Chinese Yuan) - and offers nice features, plus well-made hardware, we do expect sales to be high in China (and also in other markets). But maybe not up to 1 million units, not yet.

Nokia Fullscreen More popular slideshows

View the Original article

Thursday, March 13, 2014

, , , , , , , ,

Fitbit has received nearly 10,000 reports of skin irritation from Force owners

Fitbit kicked off a refund program last month after learning its Force activity tracker caused skin irritation in a "small percentage" of users, and now we're finally getting a better sense of the situation. According to the official recall notice from the US Consumer Product Safety Commission, the company received around 9,900 reports of skin irritation and around 250 reports of blistering. The notice also points out that the recall affects about 1 million of the wearables in the United States and about 28,000 more in Canada. So what happens next? Well, the CPSC's stance is clear: contact the company and take the money.

"Whether you hear about this recall from the CPSC or Fitbit directly, take advantage of the refund right away," CPSC communications director Scott Wolfson told Engadget. "It's actually somewhat rare for firms that we deal with to provide a refund, especially a full refund."

The Commission also wants the company to inform as many of its customers of the recall as possible, and it doesn't seem thrilled with what Fitbit has accomplished so far. At time of writing, Fitbit's popular Twitter (77,700 followers) and Facebook (250,000 likes) accounts make no mention of the recall. That's not to say Fitbit is just sitting around though: a representative confirmed to us that it'll email all Force owners "over the next few weeks" to make sure they're aware of the situation.

0 Comments Share

Source: CPSC

More Coverage: Consumerist

Tags: cpsc, fitbit, fitbitforce, force, recall, refund, skin Next: New HTC One sold on eBay in Verizon packaging for $500
View the
Original article