Apple unveils iPhone 2, both the phone and the business
The second chapter of Apple's iPhone era is almost ready to begin, and it's already clear that things will be a little different this time around.
Few people who pay even scant attention to the technology industry could claim to be shocked by the introduction of a faster iPhone earlier on Monday by Apple CEO Steve Jobs. Apple has sold 6 million iPhones since June 2007, Jobs said, and will likely sell a few more once the new model arrives on July 11 with a faster networking chip, GPS capabilities, and a software upgrade that's an IT manager's dream for a mobile device.

Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveils the 3G iPhone. For more photos from the event, click on the image.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET News.com)From a features point of view, the new model delivers on what iPhone customers want and need. Yes, you still can't do mobile messaging, and I still don't think you can do cut-and-paste, which is just bizarre. But Apple has added just about everything else people have asked for or complained about in iPhone 1.0: faster networks, secure access to corporate e-mail, precise location-based services, and third-party applications.
What's perhaps more interesting is what Apple has learned about the mobile phone business. It's not all that surprising that Apple, which has a proud legacy of product design and software development, would have created an excellent product that has the rest of the industry scrambling to overtake.
But several developments later on Monday indicate that Apple has had to learn just as many lessons about playing in the mobile phone market over the past year as it has taught the mobile phone industry about product development.
About 90 minutes after Jobs concluded his keynote, AT&T held its own press conference to announce some major changes in the way iPhones are sold. You now must immediately agree to a two-year contract with AT&T whether you buy the iPhone in one of Apple's stores or one of AT&T's stores, and there will be no online ordering. AT&T and Apple have ended their revenue-sharing agreement, and Apple also said that the "vast majority" of its new carrier agreements overseas do not involve revenue sharing. To top it off, iPhone data plans are now $10 more expensive.
This just might be the aftereffect of the unlocked iPhones. Apple executives downplayed the actual number of unlocked iPhones several times this year, claiming they couldn't estimate how many iPhones had actually been unlocked and that in any event, it just demonstrates demand for the product.
But Apple's carrier partners sure cared about that number. Apple negotiated extremely favorable deals for iPhone 1.0, getting a piece of AT&T and other carriers' revenue for data services while retaining complete control over what applications would appear on the device.
Apple held up its end of the bargain in one sense--delivering a solid product that enticed people to switch networks and drove data usage--but failed to secure its product against those who wished to unlock it from its designated networks, forcing some carriers to watch their rivals reap the benefits of iPhone data usage. Wireless carriers may be opening up their networks in new and interesting ways, but their influence on the mobile market isn't waning just yet.
It's not clear whether Apple will introduce technology changes into the new iPhone that makes it harder to jailbreak, then unlock, but it will at least require U.S. iPhone buyers to sign a two-year contract and activate the iPhone on AT&T's network before they can take it home. This won't eliminate unlocking, but could discourage it to some degree.

The faster speeds, additional countries--and a tweak to Apple's business model--should help the company hit its goal of shipping 10 million iPhones in 2008.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET News.com)Of course, compromise is part of any good partnership. In exchange for giving up revenue sharing and its novel at-home activation service, Apple is getting a subsidized iPhone. That will lower the price of entry into the iPhone world and should accelerate sales without dinging Apple's product margins to the degree that would be result if Apple absorbed the cost decrease itself. The increased sales should also offset the loss of the shared revenue.
So the big question: will the iPhone 3G--and new business model--enable Apple to meet its sales target for 2008 of 10 million units? If Apple has sold 6 million units to date, as Jobs said in his keynote, that means the company has a long way to go, having sold just 2.3 million iPhones so far in 2008.
The fact that the new iPhone won't be available until July 11 was one of the most surprising things to emerge from this morning's keynote. Apple, of course, never put a finer grain on when it expected to ship iPhone 3G beyond "next year," which Jobs quoted a few times in response to questions about the issue in 2007. But few expected the company to miss the one-year anniversary of the iPhone's debut with the new model, and at the very least, Apple itself had promised the iPhone 2.0 software by the end of June.
That means Apple will have shipped almost no iPhones from roughly the middle of May to July 11: about two whole months, although AT&T stores took longer to run out of their supply. We'll get a more precise number for iPhone shipments during Apple's third fiscal quarter, which ends in June, during the company's earnings call in July. But no matter how you slice it, that's a large gap that points to a bit of a supply chain snafu at some stage along the way.
Apple's Greg Joswiak, vice president of worldwide iPod and iPhone marketing, reiterated Apple's 10 million shipment goal in an interview after Jobs' keynote, so it's not like Apple is backing down. There are two main reasons why the company can still be confident: the combination of 3G and the cheaper price will spur potential customers who have been sitting on the sidelines in countries where the iPhone already exists, and a total of 70 countries will get official access to the iPhone, including major new destinations like Canada and Australia. In addition, Jobs hinted to CNBC later in the day that the big prize--China--could be coming sooner rather than later.
It's always interesting to watch a company try to make its way into an entirely new business; those who fail far outnumber those who succeed. The most common reason why many fail is because they forget to learn from their initial experiences, or assume they know better based on their past successes.
Apple may not proclaim it from on high in the Stevenote, but today the company showed that it's willing to learn from its mistakes, and to adjust its business model when prudent. So far in its iPhone era, Apple has wisely tackled the hard problem first--making a great product, and continuing to improve it--and is now making the kinds of changes to its business model to make sure the iPhone really does turn into the third leg of the company's business some day.
Tom Krazit, a staff writer for CNET News, focuses on all things Apple. He has covered traditional PC companies such as Dell and Hewlett-Packard, chip companies such as Intel and Advanced Micro Devices, and mobile computers ranging from Research In Motion's to Palm's. E-mail Tom.





why box themselves in like that.. I don't get it.
Verizon in my neighborhood is bad, once a month I have no service for a day.
They blame my phone for not working, if that's right then I must have nanites repairing the phone because after I call Verizon it suddenly works.
Too bad, AT&T seems to want to find ways to screw themselves. If the 3G network is reliable, and as fast as people hope, the number of consumers they could've gained should've been more than enough to subsidize the introduction of the network.
If iPhones where sale it legally in Mexico may be I never discover what I missing from the unlocked iphones. By now.. Thanks to Apple ´s discriminatory practices that push to get an unlocked device. Every Mexican who has an iPhone, enjoys a better product more than Apple couldn?t imagine it.
Why still wating a decade for a 3G iPhone in México if the cost for a mounth of data transfer costs at least $100 dollars monthly.. Now I start to believe that the rest of the GSM iPhones out of stock are already selling every where in Mexico´s streets.
It makes no sense for Apple to design a completely different iPhone just for Verizon. It's time Verizon join the rest of the world. Of course it would have to spend billions on new network hardware and antennas. But then it chose to make it's own mistake and isolate itself from the rest of the world. This is one reason a Verizon user can't text message to anyone in the world. Verizon can only text message to certain countries where it specifically has negotiated connections to. If one has AT&T, they can text to anyone in the world. Verizon can't.
I am not switching carriers for any phone... I can stick around and wait for the Samsung Instinct and Omnia and probably be just as happy as I would with an iPhone.
Besides, how many people text to other people in other countries? How many people travel outside the US on a regular basis? If I had to go to Hong Kong once or twice a month then yes, I would understand the need for me to have a 3g phone, but since I am hardly outside of my calling area, I can stick with CDMA, EVDO or whatever and not be affected. I don't see myself texting a bunch of Japanese school girls in the near future so what's the point?
It's a shame though because I really like Alltel!
Apple will reach the goal of 10Million by September and then make history with their numbers.
1. Bigger Hard Drive - 16gig is toooo small especially when you can now download third party software and pay for it!
2. Camera - No Video Recording
3. Cut / Paste - In Notes and Emails
4. Straight to Voice Mail - When you are on uTube you don't get in coming phone calls. LAME!
5. Can't send multiple pictures in an email - Do I really want to give someone access to my pic folder? I don't think so.
6. Text in landscape so the keyboard is easier to type faster - In Notes
7. Allowing to download plugins so you can watch your videos on certain web sites ie. ESPN Highlights or G4 - Daily Feed Video
8. Allowing to download plugins so I can listen to my favorite radio station in the morning ie. 96.5 Wire - Chio - P1 Fan!
I am so sure that Apple will fix some of the problems or request within 6 months to release the new iPhone 2.5 version! The people (like myself) that have the old iPhone will realize after the hype of the new iPhone 2.0 is a real rip off. I will tell everyone that is going to buy iPhone 2.0 to wait for the newer version! Because, remember how the people felt when they purchased the 4gig iPhone. SHAFTED and SCREWED!
#1. Get a laptop
#2. Get a camcorder, I'm sure people want to drain the life from their PHONE by using it as a camcorder.
#3. Sorry. No joy, maybe ...
#4. I've gotten calls while in youtube.
#5. Get a laptop
#6. Check the keynote, and to date, only the native apps are horizontal, but they demonstrated their 2.0 version switching to landscape mode while in text mode. Have to wait and see if this is new for all of their native apps.
#7. Hackers would love plug-ins, OH they do now! But not on an iPhone
#8. Get 3rd party accessory for to turn into a radio, I think it's smaller than the size of a quarter.
I never felt shafted, or screwed. I knew it was the first release, R&D costs were very high. Fortunately the demand has been so good, they've been able to produce enough to drop the price drastically. If you think 199 for this device is expensive, then you truly must be Ballmer.
"personal memo to steve jobs" - From Maverick
5 DEAL BREAKERS ON THE IPHONE
1. File Storage is key to mobile productivity. I have 16GB of memory, but I still can't store a PDF file on my phone. Let's say you are a Salesman, or a Lawyer, Doctor, Broker, Computer Nerd, whatever; We all have documents that we want to take with us wherever we are. Sell Sheets, Books, Manuals, Briefs, Whatever. You are taking to a client on the phone, and you want to email him a sell sheet, or a document. You want to be able to quickly open a couple of them, find the right file without transferring 3.1MB files over the network. Opening 3 x 3.1MB files over the network takes time. How about reading a PDF while you are on the subway ? or a plane ? or a underground parking garage where there's no signal. Shouldn't you be able to store files on your own phone ?
Apple thinks that there's a network everywhere. There isn't. This is a terribly flawed assumption. Even a OS as bad a Windows Mobile opens PDFs from the built-it Memory Card.
2. Document Storage Access. A directory where you can drop all your Word, Excel, Power Point, and PDF files, and you can navigate to them on the phone through the interface. A folder that can accessed from the computer, like a USB stick. Drop your files and go. No itunes syncing. Every computer in the world does NOT have itunes. I'm at work, I plug in my iPhone, and copy my documents into the documents folder. Simple.
3. PDF Reader. Such a sophisticated phone, yet such a poor PDF reader. Open a PDF of a newspaper or magazine on the iPhone, and try reading the text. It's very unfortunate. Either get a proper PDF reader, or have those ******-bags at Adobe build one for you.
4. Battery Life is still not up to Apple Standards. Better than the rest doesn't say very much. Don't make it thinner, use the extra 2mm for more battery. As soon as Wi-Fi gets turned on, your battery life sinks to 3 hours. Not Cool. Not Apple Cool.
5. No Copy/Paste Functionality.
NOT DEAL BREAKERS BUT SHOULD HAVE BEEN FIXED
6. Camera Resolution should be raised.
7. Camera should flip around for ichat.
8. No Flash for camera.
9. Battery should be user replaceable.
10. MMS Support.
Having said all that, I applaud Apple for 3G, somekind of GPS, great SDK, nice Exchange Server support, cool connect me, and thank God for the headphone jack.
Thanks Steve.
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by anti3g
July 7, 2008 7:15 PM PDT
- The actual price of the new apple iphone 3G = $399!
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Reply to this comment
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See all 25 Comments >>The published price being advertised all over for the new apple iphone 3G is $199?what they are not telling you is that price is only for new ATT customers and those current ATT customers who happen to be eligible for an equipment upgrade (according to ATT, upgrade eligibility is ?generally? determined by the amount of time remaining on a current contract). For all those current ATT customers who do not happen to be at the end of their contract, the actual price for you is $399 plus an $18 upgrade fee along with a new 2-year contract. ATT is penalizing their long-time, account in good standing, customers a whopping $200. Why is the actual price of the new iphone not being advertised for what it is?$399? It?s the same price as the old iphone with an increase in the data plan.
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