Because you made this last part up.
The Note sold 10 million units in a matter of months.
http://www.theverge.com/2012/8/16/3246378/samsung-galaxy-note-sales-10-million-worldwide.
Over the life of the product, to date? I have no idea how many units it sold total- the Note 2 came out and sales figures of the original Note weren't news worthy anymore, but it's a pretty safe bet they've sold millions more since then.
Ok, you understand that you linked the exact sales sales figure article that I linked in my original post, correct? And that it's dated for August 2012, 10 months after the release of the Note in October 2011? And that the Note 2 came out in September 2012, one month after this press release and that, obviously, GNote sales dropped off since then. So we are estimating here, but it's highly doubtful they doubled that number since then or even increased it by 50%. If I had to guess, I'd probably say the Note's lifetime sales sit at around 12-13m which, for the sake of this discussion, don't make a significant difference in my viewpoint.
I'm not sure what you think I made up. I posted the same article you did and clearly stated that 10m units were for the first 10 months of its release, a rate of about 1m a month. I suppose I would need to know what your definition of "a matter of months" is. is it 11? For me, a "matter of months would be about 4. 5 tops. 6 becomes half a year.
And once more- it goes to show you ( and others) have a WACKED sense of business that you think selling 10 million units of something that's a mult-hundred dollar item isn't a huge success that any business would kill for. It just shows you're simply not comprehending the numbers involved- not in a sense of just how many of something that is, or the massive dollar amounts. (For an album that costs just $10 for example, that'd be considered 10x platinum. If you think even that figure happens every other week for recording artists- and in a matter of months no less- again, you're smoking something.)
10 million units (and however many since that figure was recorded last year) is a staggering sales achievement. People's complete ignorance of business doesn't change that.
Again, for the THIRD AND FINAL TIME, I do not mean to discount the success of the original Note. But you can't look at those sales figures and then wildly compare them to some other industry. You must put them in some sort of framework. Some sort of category. For the Note, that is the mobile device market. And, in the mobile device market, the Galaxy Note is not "an insanely huge hit". I'll go with my original label of "surprising hit" and feel that it adequately describes the sales figures of the Galaxy Note.
Clearly, Samsung saw the potential and I'm sure they didn't lose money on it (though I/no one else has ever claimed that it did). But to try and compare sales figures of a mobile phone to something completely unrelated like a album is just grasping for straws.