RSS Blogs RSS
Please support our Internet Marketing advertiser: Affiliate Marketing
Featured Entry
Jun 10th, 2008, 9:56 am
OK, the iPhone launched yesterday. Apple aims at the corporate market with support for MS Exchange e-mail and at the consumer with a snazzier connection to the Net wherever you are.

I have to admit I was a little underwhelmed with the phone - which is ironic when you consider I've ordered one this morning. I should explain that as a self-employed Mac user I like the idea of a phone that synchronises with all of the songs I've bought online, holds my diary and everything and does it 'properly' rather than 'probably' (only last night I was picking up e-mails on my trusty Sony Ericsson only to find someone had sent me a message reading 'character set not supported - I won't miss that). At the moment I end up carrying an iPod Touch and a phone. 3G tips the balance in favour of the phone-only option for me.

Nevertheless, look at what you still don't get in an iPhone. The mediocre camera hasn't improved. You can't video conference - not that I want to, particularly, but I'd have liked that to have been my decision rather than leaving it to Mr. Jobs. I suppose I'll use the GPS if it's cheap enough in terms of data costs but I'm not quite convinced.

The real improvement, however, has to be in the price. Why, other than convenience, have I put my order in this morning? Because in the UK 02 has made the iPhone free with a tarrif of £45 (about $90) per month. From being hugely expensive at its launch, getting an iPhone has become a no-brainer. Why wouldn't you want one at that price point? I'd have to be crazy.

This happens to everything eventually - it starts as a luxury item, the price comes down and it eventually becomes a commodity. But did anyone expect the cost to shoot down at such speed?

My theory is that Apple knows perfectly well that outside the US, the iPhone didn't perform as hoped. It's also aware that there are a lot of pretenders like HTC, Samsung and LG with equally shiny phones with a touch screen. Apple is therefore going to flood the market and make the iPhone the natural choice just like the iPod.

Oh, and it's doing it in exactly one month. So if you're working for a competitor and don't plan to do the same, hard luck - the chances are you're already beaten.
This blog entry was written by GuyClapperton. It has been filed under the Internet Marketing category. It has received 654 views, 2 comment(s), and 2 linkbacks. 1 voter(s) have rated this entry an average of 5 out of 5 stars. It was promoted to featured status Jun 10th, 2008.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
GuyClapperton | Newbie Poster | Jun 11th, 2008
Interesting. My instinct is that Apple is going to flood the UK market with iPhones now that they're effectively free with the contract.

What features have swayed you away from them? (I should add that in my view the fact that you're happy with your existing phone is an excellent reason for not changing!)
jwenting | duckman | Jun 11th, 2008
I wouldn't want an iPhone at that price, or just about any price.
They're bulky, the user interface looks pathetic (designed for looks rather than usability), and the featureset as you notice is not what I want either.

I'd rather have a Samsung i780 or something similar (and in fact I do have just that one).

Only community members can start a blog or comment on blog entries. You must register or log in to contribute.

Forums | Blogs | Tutorials | Code Snippets | Whitepapers | RSS Feeds | Advertising
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:52 pm.
Newsletter Archive - Sitemap - Privacy Statement - Acceptable Use Policy - Contact Us
Forum system based on vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
©2003 - 2008 DaniWeb® LLC