SAN FRANCISCO : Apple's new iPhone, a "smart" mobile phone offering music storage and Internet access, will be launched on June 29, according to television ads by the high-tech group.
The iPhone, which combines the wildly popular iPod music player with features found in other smart phones, was unveiled in January by Apple chief executive Steve Jobs.
Jobs also promised that iPhones would be available in June. Apple delayed the release of its new Leopard operating system for Macintosh computers so engineers could devote their efforts to the iPhone.
A supposed internal Apple memo leaked last month indicated concerns that iPhones might not make it to market on time.
"There have been a lot of rumours of significant problems with the product," said analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group in Silicon Valley.
"What Apple is trying to do is put those rumours to rest and take pressure off stock prices."
The device, to sell at prices of 499 to 599 dollars, will be distributed in the US market through AT&T, the new name for the Cingular Wireless brand.
It will weigh 135 grammes and have the Apple OS X operating system and four or eight gigabytes of storage. It will be able to play videos as well as music and have a screen of nine centimetres.
Analysts are divided on whether the iPhone will be an industry-changing device or be too expensive to compete with other smart phones such as the BlackBerry.
On its website, Apple said the iPhone will include "a revolutionary mobile phone, a widescreen iPod with touch controls, and a breakthrough Internet communications device." It will also include a two-megapixel digital camera.
A second-generation iPhone is "already being rushed out," Enderle said.
Taiwan-based manufacturer Quanta Computer is reported to have a contract to build millions of next-generation iPhones that are to begin shipping before the end of the year.
"The iPhone has a number of shortcomings and now that it is in the final phase of testing Apple can pinpoint what those are and fix them in the second-generation," Enderle said.
"As a gen-one product, no one in the industry thought Apple was going to hit one out of the park. Especially with this being their first phone."
Among the flaws in iPhones are built-in batteries likely to run out of useful life in approximately a year based on common recharging patterns, according to Enderle.
AT&T has already received more than a million inquiries about iPhones.
Working with AT&T lets Apple tailor iPhones to the GSM mobile network that is common outside the United States. The iPhone is to debut in Europe by the end of this year and in Asia in 2008.
The iPhone, which combines the wildly popular iPod music player with features found in other smart phones, was unveiled in January by Apple chief executive Steve Jobs.
Jobs also promised that iPhones would be available in June. Apple delayed the release of its new Leopard operating system for Macintosh computers so engineers could devote their efforts to the iPhone.
A supposed internal Apple memo leaked last month indicated concerns that iPhones might not make it to market on time.
"There have been a lot of rumours of significant problems with the product," said analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group in Silicon Valley.
"What Apple is trying to do is put those rumours to rest and take pressure off stock prices."
The device, to sell at prices of 499 to 599 dollars, will be distributed in the US market through AT&T, the new name for the Cingular Wireless brand.
It will weigh 135 grammes and have the Apple OS X operating system and four or eight gigabytes of storage. It will be able to play videos as well as music and have a screen of nine centimetres.
Analysts are divided on whether the iPhone will be an industry-changing device or be too expensive to compete with other smart phones such as the BlackBerry.
On its website, Apple said the iPhone will include "a revolutionary mobile phone, a widescreen iPod with touch controls, and a breakthrough Internet communications device." It will also include a two-megapixel digital camera.
A second-generation iPhone is "already being rushed out," Enderle said.
Taiwan-based manufacturer Quanta Computer is reported to have a contract to build millions of next-generation iPhones that are to begin shipping before the end of the year.
"The iPhone has a number of shortcomings and now that it is in the final phase of testing Apple can pinpoint what those are and fix them in the second-generation," Enderle said.
"As a gen-one product, no one in the industry thought Apple was going to hit one out of the park. Especially with this being their first phone."
Among the flaws in iPhones are built-in batteries likely to run out of useful life in approximately a year based on common recharging patterns, according to Enderle.
AT&T has already received more than a million inquiries about iPhones.
Working with AT&T lets Apple tailor iPhones to the GSM mobile network that is common outside the United States. The iPhone is to debut in Europe by the end of this year and in Asia in 2008.
1 comment:
I like apple iphone, but the prices are too high right now.I will wait for price down, and then i will buy one for me.
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