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Saturday, July 4, 2009

London Stock Exchange To Abandon Windows.


[Slashdot]
comment []9:55:06 AM    

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

iPhone 3GS Sells One Million Units in Its First Weekend.

Apple has announced that 1 million iPhone 3GS units were sold during the phone's first three days of availability. Interestingly, this is the exact amount of time it took the iPhone 3G, released on 11-Jul-08, to clear one million units. The iPhone 3GS also launched in just eight countries, compared to 24 countries for the iPhone 3G launch. Despite the incredible anticipation and memorable images of lines spilling out of Apple retail stores, the original iPhone didn't hit the one million mark until 74 days after its release on 29-Jun-07.

Although it's interesting to compare these numbers, we have to take a number of factors into account, especially when considering the time it took the original iPhone to hit the one million mark. While the subsidized prices for the iPhone 3G 8 GB and 16 GB models were the same as for the iPhone 3GS 16 GB and 32 GB models - $199 and $299 respectively - the original iPhone's 4 GB and 8 GB models were priced at $499 and $599 (without subsidies). Selling at roughly double the cost and under first-generation scrutiny and skepticism, the original iPhone's 74-day wait to sell one million units is easily understandable.

It's also worth considering that since the original iPhone's debut, Apple has opened more retail stores, and a wider population has caught on to the iPhone phenomenon and even the concept of owning a smartphone. Additional years of marketing, positive reviews, and awards should also be acknowledged when considering the tremendous reduction in time it took both the iPhone 3G and 3GS to hit the one million milestone.

But how should we think about the apparently identical sales statistic for the iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS? Some factors point to lowered expectations, such as the dour economy (the major bank failures that signaled the most serious phase of the economic crisis came after the release of the iPhone 3G in July 2008). Plus, at least in the United States, AT&T's fumbling of the iPhone 3GS upgrade pricing must have caused some people to hold off on upgrading (see "Call AT&T for the Best iPhone Upgrade Price", 2009-06-15, and "AT&T Improves and Clarifies iPhone Upgrade Eligibility", 2009-06-17). While AT&T eventually improved its wayward upgrade policy to be more friendly to loyal customers, initial reporting may still have negatively affected the first weekend of sales.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, the iPhone 3GS could have exceeded the sales of its predecessor, given the additional year of marketing and press, and an improved list of specs for the same price points. This year's model also had the benefit of online pre-orders, with devices shipped free for arrival or available for pickup at an Apple Store on launch day. The iPhone 3G required in-person sales and activation at the beginning of its run.

Which generation's one-million-sold mark is the greater accomplishment is thus a difficult question to answer - but quite the enjoyable problem to have if you're Apple. Meanwhile, the demographics of who partook in this first weekend's shopping spree will likely remain unknown, though this year it likely contained a slew of generation-jumping owners of the original iPhone, a healthy dash of iPhone 3G upgraders, and likely some wide-eyed newcomers too.

 

Copyright © 2009 Doug McLean. TidBITS is copyright © 2009 TidBITS Publishing Inc. If you're reading this article on a Web site other than TidBITS.com, please let us know, because if it was republished without attribution, by a commercial site, or in modified form, it violates our Creative Commons License.

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By doug_mclean@tidbits.com (Doug McLean). [TidBITS: Mac News for the Rest of Us]
comment []1:43:04 AM    

Friday, June 19, 2009

Are You Ready to Ditch Your Laptop for a Smartphone?. As smartphones grow in functionality -- just think about what the iPhone 3G S and iPhone 3.0 allow you to do -- you might soon be able to forego the traditional laptop in favor of a smartphone. Should you? By (Tom Kaneshige). [Latest from Computerworld]
comment []12:07:14 AM    

Monday, June 15, 2009

The iPhone's Wary New Rivals. [BusinessWeek.com -- Technology]
comment []10:17:34 AM    

Friday, June 5, 2009

Survey: Apple's iPhone has teen appeal. The Global Habbo Youth Survey 2009 found that the iPhone is the fifth most popular mobile phone brand globally amongst teens; Apple's phone did not appear in the top ten a year ago.

By Nick Spence. [Macworld]
comment []9:24:30 PM    

Smartphone OS Smackdown: WebOS vs. the World. Does the world need another smartphone operating system? Apple's iPhone OS is still booming; Google's Android is increasingly promising; and three longtime contenders--Microsoft's Windows Mobile, RIM's BlackBerry OS, and Symbian's S60--are undergoing serious renovation to keep up with the times. By (Harry McCracken). [Latest from Computerworld]
comment []6:32:30 PM    

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Apple hits top spot in UK, European education sectors. Gartner Research says that Apple is the top computer maker in the Western European education market for the first quarter of 2009, with a 26.4 percent market share.

By Nick Spence. [Macworld]
comment []9:39:45 PM    

Apple picks NC for $1B data center. Apple will spend $1 billion building a major data center in North Carolina, the state's governor announced yesterday after signing a bill that will give Apple an estimated $46 million in tax breaks over the next 10 years. By gkeizer@ix.netcom.com (Gregg Keizer). [Latest from Computerworld]
comment []9:30:20 PM    

Palm Pre 'can challenge iPhone'. Palm's make or break new smartphone, called the Pre, has good reviews ahead of its launch in the US on 6 June. [BBC News | Technology | UK Edition]
comment []11:28:06 AM    

Friday, May 29, 2009

Nokia's Ovi can't fail - must fail.

Rip it up and start again

Comment It must be frustrating to sketch out a long-term technology roadmap in great depth, and see it come to fruition... only to goof on your own execution. But to do so repeatedly - as Nokia has - points to something seriously wrong.âo[oe]

Whitepaper - Creating portals with Office Sharepoint: put an end to the information free for all

[The Register]
comment []3:30:56 PM    

© Copyright 2009 William T Goodall.



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