Apple has issued a statement in which is said it has sold over 1 million iPhones during the first three days of the device being on sale. “Customers are voting and the iPhone is winning,” said Steve Jobs, “With over 50,000 applications available from Apple’s revolutionary App Store, iPhone momentum is stronger than ever.” In addition, version 3.0 of the iPhone has been downloaded 6 million times. This also happens to be the first careful official word from Jobs since he took medical leave earlier this year.
One for myself and one for my wife… w00t!
I’d love to get one if I could afford it. I had a 1st gen iPhone early last year but I gave it up for a BlackBerry when the 2.0 OS made it crash all the time, even with no add-on apps.
I may save up for the 3G; at $79 refurbished from AT&T it’s hard to pass up and my second line is due for an upgrade. I particularly prefer Mail.app to the BlackBerry’s nearly useless messaging app. $200 for video recording and a small speed bump is not enough to tempt me into the 3GS though.
I’d love to have an iPhone but the problem is that the cost just for a 16GB model is NZ$1129 .00 (without contract). I’d hate to know what the 32GB model is – but they refuse to sell that in New Zealand though. I hope that if they do bring the new 3G S to New Zealand that it’ll be offered on Telecom’s XT Network.
The other stories I’ve seen say that more people ordered online and didn’t wait in the queue to buy. There has already been a $30 refund for delayed activations.
It’s surprising that it’s been that popular with just a few hardware updates.
Will AT&T be complaining in the next month that their network collapsed again due to all the new iPhone users?
Depends on your definition of “a few”. The speedup alone is enough for many people to go ahead an buy one.
Well, the graphics hardware has been enhanced, the CPU has been upgraded to leapfrog the iPod touch, and the camera finally works nicely.
Unfortunately, they couldn’t upgrade the AT&T hardware, so a lot of people are still running on an EDGE data network. People on other continents will enjoy it more, especially since it supposedly supports higher data speeds.
they didn’t have that damned exclusive contract with AT&T here in the states. There’s no way I’m switching to AT&T when the reception in my area is worse than Sprint’s (and that’s saying something) and I’m sure as hell not paying $800 for an unlocked one. It’s nice, but it’s not worth that much. When and if Apple starts contracting with T-mobile I will get one. The built-in accessibility alone would be worth having it, even with my feelings about Apple’s app store policies.
The big issue in the US is that the phone only works on GSM (which is what most of the rest of the world uses) and so most of your Mobile service providers use a different and incompatible standard. AT&T is one of the only GSM providers as far as I am aware.
T-Mobile is GSM as well…there is no reason to limit it just to AT&T other than to artificially limit who uses the phone and where…
That shows the fact that Apple has at least 1 million hard core fans. That tells nothing about the market in general, except that there will be more second hand iPhone 3G available.
A bit abrasive, but I actually agree with your point.
I would be interested in seeing a breakdown of how many phones went to existing iPhone customers, versus bringing in new customers. I suspect the number of churned customers to be fairly high, which is fairly remarkable in itself, but any real growth in the market will rely on finding new customers.
Like a good little lemming, I picked up a 3GS on Friday, despite my 3G being barely 10 months old. I have no doubt that Apple was kicking in some serious incentives and rebates to the carriers for encouraging upgrades, because I was able to acquire a 32GB 3GS for less than I paid for my 16GB 3G, which itself was acquired under a special upgrade promo despite being months away from my upgrade period. In both cases I received “new” customer pricing, but for the 3G I also had to pay a $50 “admin fee” for the upgrade. Not so for the 3GS.
Apple has to be picking up part of the bill for this, I know my carrier well enough (Rogers) to know that they wouldn’t be paying all of that subsidy (2 upgrades for their most expensive phone within a 10 month period) out of their own pocket. Although my monthly wireless spend is relatively high, it’s not outrageous, and certainly not enough for them to have even absorbed the subsidy from my original 3G between then and now.
So a new 32GB 3GS for $299 CDN, requiring only a one-year extension to my contract with a carrier I don’t envision leaving anyways. The performance improvements and decent video recording alone justify it for me, if only as a bit of an extravegant luxury. I could probably sell my existing 3G for at least that, and wind up cost neutral.
And I have no doubt that when the next phone comes out at this time next year, I’ll be receiving the same deal and will likely do the same thing.
I could list any number of negative points about the iPhone, but frankly, it is the best handset I’ve used for my day-to-day requirements, which to me is the driving factor. And until a handset arrives that trumps that experience for me, I’ll probably remain on the treadmill, good little lemming that I am.
Now, if they would just port iTunes to linux…
Either way they just grossed a couple hundred million dollars in one day. Holy moly!
With every release I get closed to wanting to take the plunge! Somebody slap some sense into me. I don’t NEED an iPhone!
Based on a survey by Piper Jaffray of 256 early iPhone 3G S adopters shopping for their new handsets at Apple retail stores in New York and Minnesota, “(…) Approximately 12% of consumers who visited a retail store this past weekend to make their iPhone 3G S purchase said they were replacing a BlackBerry handset [7% from Motorola, 5% from Palm, 5% from LG, 4% from Samsung, 2% from Nokia, 9% from “Other,” and 56% from an earlier iPhone model] (…) A similar survey conducted during last year’s iPhone 3G launch found that just 6% of buyers were replacing a BlackBerry, suggesting Apple may be on pace to double its market share gains from RIM this time around. (…) Of those iPhone 3G S buyers surveyed this weekend, 43% purchased the higher-capacity 32GB model and 57% were content with the 16GB model. This compares to 66% of buyers who selected the higher capacity 16GB iPhone 3G last year and 95% who purchased the higher capacity 6GB original iPhone when it was launched in 2007. (…)”
AppleInsider has a more detailed article about this:
http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/09/06/22/12_of_early_iphone_3g…