Source - http://news.yahoo.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Holiday In Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
By - Press Release
Category - Holiday In Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
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| Holiday In Miami |
Apple acolytes in Asia kicked
off the global rollout of two new iPhones Friday, but complaints about
its high price and no new alliance in the vast Chinese market threatened
to dampen the mood.
The once-unbeatable king of the smartphones
was brandishing a potentially lucrative new deal with Japan's biggest
mobile carrier, but was without any new partnership in China.
That,
and rumblings over the high cost -- even of the pared-down iPhone 5C --
looked set to mute the fanfare that routinely accompanies launches,
observers say.
The double debut kicked off in Australia when stores threw open their doors to crowds at 8:00 am (2200 GMT Thursday).
Jimmy
Gunawan, 33, was first in line at the company's flagship Sydney store,
but was surprised he only had to stake his place 20 hours earlier.
"Last
year, I got here around the same time and there was already a queue of
about 20 people," the freelance graphic designer said.
In Tokyo,
diehard fans began lining up last week and even sat out a weekend
typhoon to keep their spot in a queue that grew to around a kilometre
(half-a-mile) in length by opening time, police estimated.
Media helicopters hovered over the Japanese capital, where Batman was among those outside the Apple store in Ginza.
Actor
Ken Watanabe, star of "Inception" and "Letters From Iwo Jima", was on
hand to welcome buyers at Docomo's main Tokyo shop, marking the new
alliance between Apple and the country's biggest carrier.
The
firm, which has about 42 percent of the Japanese market, has shed more
than 3.5 million subscribers to rivals since 2008, when SoftBank first
rolled out the iPhone in Japan, local media have reported.
Hisako
Nagashima, a 34-year-old manicurist who was waiting to snap up an iPhone
5S in gold, said it had been make-or-break time for her relationship
with the company.
"If NTT Docomo had not released iPhone this
time, I would have changed carriers," she told AFP.All three Japanese
carriers were offering both models "free" with two-year contracts.
But in places where up-front payments are more common, there was griping over the steep asking price.
"Wow, $1,129 (US$1,065) for an iPhone 5S here in Australia. That's
simply insane," tweeted Bill Hutchison, referring to the cost of a 64GB
model of the new version, which boasts a speedier processor and a
fingerprint sensor.
Another, David Smith, tweeted: "Incredible -- Apple charging $99 for
iPhone 5C in the USA (with a contract) but $740 in Australia and its
$1,200 for 5S - no wonder Android phones are popular."
The
polycarbonate-bodied 5C, supposedly aimed at budget-conscious smartphone
shoppers, was widely trailed as Apple's answer to the onslaught of
cheaper, Android-powered models, led by Samsung.
But its hefty $700 ticket price in China will put it out of reach of most consumers in the world's biggest mobile market.
"It's
not worth the price," said Wang Ying, a Beijing-based analyst with
consultant firm iResearch. Many domestically made smartphones are priced
as low as $100.
Apple has not revealed what the "C" stands for,
but did not knock down months of media speculation that it was intended
to signify "cheap" or "China".
In an interview with Bloomberg
Businessweek, published Thursday, Apple chief executive Tim Cook
countered that quality had always been the driving force.
"We
never had an objective to sell a low-cost phone," Cook told the
magazine. "Our primary objective is to sell a great phone and provide a
great experience, and we figured out a way to do it at a lower cost."
Analyst Wang said Apple also appeared to have missed a trick by not
reaching a deal with China Mobile and its 700 million subscribers -- the
country's largest carrier.
Currently, Apple has sales contracts with China Unicom and China Telecom.
"Cooperating with China Mobile will be a significant channel for Apple to... win more users."
Despite
their simultaneous availability in China -- the first time Apple has
brought the country online in the initial wave -- Hong Kong's resellers
were pouncing, hoping to flip the phones for as much as double what they
paid.
"Handsome boy, are you selling your phones?" a reseller was
heard discreetly saying, before leading new iPhone 5S owners to the
back stairs of the shopping mall to carry out the transaction.
The
much-coveted gold-coloured iPhone, which resellers thought would
attract a real premium in status-conscious Hong Kong, was nowhere to be
found.
"I haven't seen a gold one yet," a reseller, who declined to give his name, told AFP an hour into the launch.
He
said he would sell the 16 gigabyte model of the phone for "at least
HK$8000 ($1,031)", while another reseller said he would sell the same
model for almost double the HK$5,588 ticket price.

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