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Jun. 10, 2009
There's absolutely no question anymore that Apple has fundamentally revolutionized the smartphone market,
and it could have some really devastating consequences for Sprint and the Pre.
When the doors at Best Buy and Sprint stores opened just last Saturday, they did so to a world where the
Palm Pre and iPhone 3G were identically priced.
Today, only four days after the Pre launch, two more upgraded iPhone models are on the showroom floor at AT&T –
the 3GS 32GB and 16GB models – and the same iPhone 3G for $100 less.
Mostly notable about Apple’s bold move is the extent to which the company is now leaning heavily on software
while simultaneously leveraging its existing hardware...
Apple in fact avoided the redundancy and high production costs of the rumored iPhone Nano and will now run
through its existing inventory of 3Gs at a recession-palatable price point.
First, the new iPhone is 2 to 3 times faster
than its older model. To some extent, the new 3GS isn’t that different from the existing 3G. Sure, it’s faster,
has more memory and a better camera that can handle video, but it’s essentially the same phone.
But with the new APIs and features offered by the iPhone OS 3.0, every iPhone gets an overhaul, even
the now lowly 3G. Make no mistake, the 3G was still seen as one of, if not the premium, smartphone on the market,
but now things are rapidly moving forward for Apple...
Apple has successfully managed to expand the iPhone’s demographic in a way that is inclusive of the 3G and
creates a kind of status for its new product line with the 3GS 32 GB model.
This has more than one wireless industry observer thinking that this does not bode well for the Pre...
However, while Apple may have redefined smartphone pricing, will such a drastic reduction in the price of
the 3G hurt sales of the 3GS? Only time will tell, and unlike Palm and Sprint, Apple has plenty of that.
Does Apple really care if 3GSs aren’t immediately flying off the shelves?
It would certainly be nice of course, but it’s not going to hurt them if early sales are not breaking any
records yet.
With a successful App Store that has already recorded 1 billion downloads and a new rush of mobile development
apps that makes use of over 1,000 new APIs included with the iPhone OS 3.0, it is almost unthinkable that any
device will rival Apple’s current smartphone supremacy in the near future.
And when all those $99 3Gs are gone, Apple will have effectively increased adoption and can discontinue the 3G,
moving the 3GS to the forefront of AT&T’s upgraded 7.2 HSPA network.
Pairing of the 3GS and an upgraded AT&T network could be the fastest smartphone/network combination the
industry has ever seen. As it stands, the old 3G is actually faster than AT&Ts current 3G network.
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This article was featured on Business 5.0 and on
Tech Blog.
Source: Apple.