Verizon Rejected iPhone Deal 290
SnowDog74 writes "According to an article in USA Today, Verizon Wireless rejected an Apple deal over the iPhone. The article says that Verizon wasn't happy with the strict terms Apple demanded — a Verizon Wireless VP is quoted saying that Apple wanted a cut of monthly revenues and control of the customer relationship. What's perhaps equally interesting, however, is the implication from sources that say Cingular's exclusive 5-year deal with Apple applies within the United States only. If this is true, it undermines some of the criticism Apple has been receiving for their business strategy surrounding the iPhone, given the size of the cell-phone market outside the US."
iGot (Score:3, Funny)
Thanks,
Cingular
interesting? no. (Score:5, Insightful)
What's perhaps equally interesting, however, is the implication from sources that say Cingular's exclusive 5-year deal with Apple applies within the United States only.
duh... perhaps Cingular isn't used outside the US (or very much?) They aren't in
Re:interesting? no. (Score:5, Insightful)
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So it's still important to note that the deal with Cingular applies only to the US market because it opens up the possibility that the iPhone will be available to users in other co
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Re:Mono, what? Poly or something? (Score:4, Interesting)
Long story short, Apple has yet to sell a single cell phone. Frankly, I'm all with you on the Newton analogy. Once Apple dries up the supply of people who will buy anything with an Apple logo, I don't think the iPhone is going to sell very well at all.
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"The offense of monopoly power under 2 of the Sherman Act has two elements: (1) the possession of monopoly power in the relevant market and (2) the willful acquisition or maintenance of that power as distinguished from growth or development as a consequence of a superior product, business acumen, or historic accident." United States v. Grinnell Corp., 384 U.S. 563, 570-71 (1966).
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Service & retailers: the other side of the coi (Score:5, Informative)
Apple's terms would have cut out major retailers when it comes to the handset, making it more difficult to retain those retail partners. It also would have taken warranty policy from the carrier to the manufacturer - and the iPhone would be the only handset with this arrangement. I think customers would have hated it, but maybe Apple planned to be more fair. How are they on iPod warranty?
Verizon has been treading lightly with retailers since their split with Radio Shack (over R$ revenue). The separation hurt both companies right off the bat, and the implications of the separation are still developing. If Wal-Mart and Best Buy were cut out of the iPhone deal, they might have such a sour taste that they skip off to Cingular instead.
If Cingular's terms do not exclude third-party retailers, Verizon will suffer anyway.
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I'd guess that this would be for a limited time, and for the benefit of Apple. Those big stores are notorious (ahem.. Walmart) for using their bulk buying to get better deals.
Or maybe Apple just wants all that foot traffic into their store, and they won't be able to supply Apple stores, cell stores, and big chain retailers.
Re:Service & retailers: the other side of the (Score:5, Interesting)
Or how about the fact that they care so much about their customers that they require their call reps to handle anything non-call related in their spare moments between making call quotas? You know, those little things like recalculating bills that have gone awry (see IVR) or filing the paperwork...
My wife worked for Verizon, the only thing they care less about then their customers is their computer systems - except for th mice, those have to be installed by an expert technician. Probably not the same one that installed the fully tested software update that took down your entire department yesterday, cannot be backed out of, and is costing you your paycheck (if your not answering phones, your not earning...)
Yep, customers are number one, provided you qualify that statement as "after everythig else but the computer systems..."
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Re:Service & retailers: the other side of the (Score:5, Interesting)
Ermm... I had 4 lines on a family plan...We were all happily using our 1800 minutes or whatever, and i was paying 170 or 180 a month. One month, there was a crisis in the family, and the total of calls was quite a bit in excess of our minutes, to the point that my bill was $680... I called customer service and explained the situation, and they said they'ed forward that along with a backdated request to up my minute allotment since i never went over and always paid on time... They said that this was a situation they've had before and that was usually the way that it was remedied... a few days later, i got a call from them that said that billing had determined that it "wasn't in the customers best interest" to do so...
Now, if they had said "sorry, but there's nothing we can do about it" that'd have been one thing... But they said "there is something we do about that" and then turned around and decided NOT to... That has made me one unhappy verizon customer... Of course, I'm sticking with them because my contracts up in June, and guess what comes out then on another network?
So no... I can't see how verizon is a customer service oriented carrier... everything with them is like pulling teeth...
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i won't even go into how few dropped calls i've had or how great their service is in traditionally low service areas. cin
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Cingular works where my Sprint phone *and* where my wife's Verizon phone works *and* where they won't work. How do I know? My coworker as well as my vacation partner (ski trip... think lake & river cell coverage) both have Cingular.
Sprint's customer service has been good to me... I call, point out the problem, at it's fixed. Hardly the case for my wife's Verizon service... which was so poor we switched her to Verizon.
Not to mention Sprint's data plan has sane pricing.
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Let's see how Verizon feels at the end of the year (Score:3, Funny)
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Re:Let's see how Verizon feels at the end of the y (Score:3, Funny)
Then gets sued by Google for revenue similarity...
Perhaps smug? (Score:2)
When the phone is released and it's overpriced for the casual market and underpowered for the business market and even if they sell a decent number of units it will be considered a flop because Jobs set the bar too high... maybe Verizon will be sitting back thinking "I'm glad we dodged that one."
not sure they care (Score:3, Informative)
on the other side, maybe they didn't want anything to do with it. they are notorious for ruining cool potential features to ensure a revenue stream. they try to cripple cameraphones with that terrible pixplace thing, they trash bluetooth. i would think the iPhone is not screwed down enough for them, though it's possible the nego
There won't be that many sold... (Score:2)
Five years? (Score:5, Funny)
Sigh... why oh why can't I have my apple and eat it too?
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In other words, will there be an unlocked iPhone available into which I can install my T-Mobile sim card? It's not clear to me that the five-year deal precludes that. Besides, even if it does, I'm sure unlocked iPhones will be available on the internet, since they will be demanded in other countries. Is there anyth
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Possibly. It's been fairly well documented that Apple's deal with Cingular involved them modifying the Cingular system in order to support the Visual Voice Mail feature.
Whether this will happen with other carriers around the world remains to be seen. I suspect what will happen is that when you roam on another carrier (say T-Mobile or something outside the country) your phone will work OK
They've got the business model all worked out (Score:3, Funny)
What, you mean $31,000 a month for Cingular service [heraldtribune.com] isn't cheap enough for you?
Re:Five years? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Like a zillion other things
Who would have ever imagined that?
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Land of the Free to be shafted and used by the corporations?
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Re:Five years? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Not according to Glenn Lurie, Cingular's president of national distribution. From a PC Magazine article [pcmag.com]:
While "there are bad guys out there that unlock phones," Lurie said, Apple and Cingular are taking unspecified steps to make the phone more difficult to unlock and use on other GSM carriers in the US.
So Cingular and Apple will supposedly make it difficult to unlock the iPhone. Also, you're a B
Re:Five years? (Score:5, Funny)
What? We are the program. We made it, we run it, we sell it. Free market, baaay-beee! Get with the program!
I mean look at our cable, land-line, and internet markets. It's all about competition and survival-of-the-fittest over here. The consumer rules! We have the best services for the best prices anywhere in the world. By definition. Anything, anywhere else is just some mock-up of the free market we have in place here in the U-S-of-A, likely held together with some pseudo-socialist glue. Our companies live and die in the market trenches without any pansy help from the government. Sheee-ooot.
Cheney/Lay 2008!
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The only phones Telstra lock to their network are prepaid phone
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- Play music crippled by DRM
- Surf the net
- A few features that all PDAs have, such as calendar and notes
The interface is nice because it's a big touch screen, but if my experience with Apple hardware is anything to go by, it won't be very durable.
The only thing the iPhone has over other PDA phones is Steve Jobs and Apple marketing it. By the time it comes out there will probably already be a
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I don't care so much about the ipod functionality (I already have one that I only use at the gym) or the web browser. I want it because I can't manage a conference call or even call waiting on my phone without dropping someone 70% of the time.
3rd party apps? Who the hell cares. It's a phone. It makes phone calls. That's what I want it for. There are no good third party apps anyway.
DRM? Fairplay vs P
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jackass
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2. I find it hilarious that people think that something "as
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First off, the iPhone can play plain old MP3s. If you wanna rip your music to them, go right ahead. They do still sell CDs, don't they?
Second, the term "crippled" is an exaggeration, especially when compared to other DRM schemes. Yes, you can play music "crippled" by DRM so that you can only play it on five different computers. Or you can play music "crippled" by DRM on an unlimited number of iPhones or iPods. Or you can burn it to an unlimited number of CDs, so long as you only want five copies of the sam
Verizon's big mistake (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Verizon's big mistake (Score:4, Informative)
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It's all about branding (Score:3, Interesting)
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Maby this will be a wakeup call to the cell phone companies that they are completly clueless about the market they control.
Or maybe it will be a wakeup call to Apple fans to remind them that the company that made the iPod also made the flop that was the Newton. They're not infallible, and given the terms Apple was demanding, it would definitely need to be to make it worth it.
As a Verizon customer (Score:5, Insightful)
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I've used Verizon & Cingular (since back when it was ATT Wireless). 3 years ago I would've agreed with you 100%, but I haven't had any trouble with Cingular's network in recent memory. You also can't use your Verizon phone overseas but I doubt that affects too many people here. The only pain-in-the-ass with Cingular was making sure that modified phone flexes were capable of switching back & forth between ATT and Cingular towers. I haven't mucked with that in a while so I'm not sure if it's still
Re:As a Verizon customer (Score:4, Interesting)
That's exactly why Verizon would never accept the iPhone. Apple wants total control over the phone and its design and how it looks. Verizon wants the same.
What do you get when two immovable objects stare across a room at each other?
The third one that realizes that denying people the ability to do what they want with what they pay for gets the big deal. Cingular doesn't cripple its phones.
Verizon getting the iPhone would have shocked me.
I'm also glad it didn't go CDMA in general -- I don't want to have to call support just to do something simple like change phones.
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I've been a T-mobile customer, Verizon, Nextel, and Cingular.
Cingular is the only carrier where I reside now. T-mobile removed a tower and Verizon has an extremely weak signal.
Nextel was a company provided plan so that doesn't apply to me anymore.
I've had great service will all four of them.
My current opinion is
1)Cingular
2)T-Mobile
3)Verizon
4)Nextel
My opinion a year ago would have been
1)T-Mobile
2)Verizon
3)Nextel
and my opinion 3 years before that would be di
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foreign iPhone sales (Score:2, Interesting)
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Look, you euro-prude, iPods are SHINY! Apple clearly knows how to give us what we wa.. ohhhh, shiny!
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http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch2en/conc
Apple iPhone (Score:5, Insightful)
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Yes, it tells us that GSM penetration in the US and Canada is almost at 50% of the area covered by CDMA.
Its really pointless the keep harping on this CDMA/GSM rag. GMS is fine for itty-bitty countries where you can't get out of sight of the nearest town. It takes vastly more towers than CDMA. In Canada, and the US those towers are being built at
CDMA phones are unfriendly to free software (Score:4, Informative)
The problem I've seen with phones that use Qualcomm's IS-95 [wikipedia.org] system (often called CDMA after its physical layer) is that phones for IS-95 often support only Qualcomm's BREW environment [wikipedia.org], which uses digital signature requirements to shut out developers of shareware, freeware, and free software from porting their software to common IS-95 phones. As I understand it, phones that support GSM are more likely to support Java ME MIDP [wikipedia.org], which generally allows anybody to compile and run a midlet.
Re:CDMA phones are unfriendly to free software (Score:4, Informative)
first, choice of network technology has nothing to do with application environment. Sprint, for example, is the second largest CDMA operator in the US, and does not sell a BREW phone (to the best of my knowledge; certainly the vast majority, at least, of their phones are Java-based phones). it is true that BREW is a sure sign of a CDMA phone, but the inverse is not true. even on Verizon's network, for example, see the Palm devices as a counter-example: no BREW even available.
second, choice of application environment has nothing to do with signing requirements. several operators who have java application environments on their phones require signing or other forms of controlled distribution and application loading for apps to run; see, for example, Nextel. also, nearly every vendor that allows unsigned apps to run on their devices (which is most of them) restricts unsigned apps' access to certain features, most commonly the PIM functions and things relating directly to the phone network, like sending SMS messages. to access those features, every network i've looked at (which is all the major US ones and a small handful of european ones) require signing.
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Presumably you meant "will have CDMA (well, IS-95) forever", for consistency's sake. HSDPA is an extension to UMTS, whose radio layer is, err, umm, a form of CDMA. (Yes, I agree, the way technical terms are misused for marketing reasons is annoying.)
So what's being replaced in Australia is IS-95, not CDMA; the replacement n
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criticism you say? (Score:2)
Can you elaborate on this...
Expensive data plan & single carrier - Nah (Score:2)
Whats the big deal? (Score:4, Insightful)
not a match for Verizon (Score:5, Informative)
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$5 for Internet on my phone per month, plus data? 10 cents a piece for a text message that is less than 250 bytes? $3 per ringtone that I can get on iTunes(TM) for a single $? Not to mention the numbers listed as having called my phone that I have never heard of? Measuring calls in minutes instead of seconds?
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Doesn't sound like you need a new country, just a new phone company.
$5/month for unlimited data? Sounds like T-Mobile USA. 10 cent text messages? Sounds like T-Mobile USA and a number of others. I
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Outside of some large urban centers, smaller carriers are really hit-or-miss. I had T-Mobile for a long time. When I lived in Scranton, PA I had no trouble using it. Full coverage even out in the hills at school.
But when I moved to Harrisburg, I had horrible service. I couldn't even use it at my parents house within line of sight of a cell tower less then a mile away. That's when I switched to Cingular. My wife and I have been extremely pleased with the coverage and haven't had any troubles with dropped ca
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Working with Apple's like dating a supermodel (Score:2, Interesting)
IBM decided Apple wasn't worth the pain. Looks like Verizon's making that same call, too.
"Steve Jobs makes Simon Cowell look positively sycophantic."
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Well, there might be some truth in that, but I think what really happened was different. Apple certainly is demanding in what they ask for, because they have customers with certain expectations to cater for. The portable and compact computer markets is where its at. For that you need low power and high performance, not something that is easy to achieve. IBM has little interest to invest in that market, but Intel does.
Exclusive to Rogers in Canada (Score:3, Interesting)
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Most Canadian providers use GSM (Score:2)
Cingular needs all the help it can get... (Score:2, Interesting)
Verizon sucks, but doesn't need Apple's business.
Aside from the fact the the iPhone is overrated, I think that the deal will hurt Cingular in the long run. Sharing revenues (not profits) could end being a case of "giving away the farm to sell a horse" kind of deal for Cingular.
Re:Cingular needs all the help it can get... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Good (Score:3, Informative)
I mean, telling everyone a product you're releasing into a market that has generally been considered the highest of high tech for the last 5 years, then actually using 'High Technology' as the 4th bullet point on the front of the box and all your advertising is pretty stupid. I think the Verizon decision makers probably played out a sales scenerio in their heads between one of their reps and someone like me (I'd imagine a fairly typical Verizon customer), realized it made them look like idiots ("But but, it's HIGH techNOLOGY!!") and decided they'd let the kiddie carriers deal with the kiddie customers.
eff ell aim!
Lucky us (Score:3, Insightful)
While I understand that many people find Cingular to be joke, I am happy that cingular was flexible enough to adopt a phone that will likely force them to reevaluate their business model. They will certainly have rethink the data rates, and they are not likely to make any money off music downloads.
In a couple years, I am sure verizon, and it's customers, will be perfectly happy with the iPod knockoff Zunefone, with it's verizon only music downloads and it's DRM protected overpriced ringtones. I am sure everyone will continue to say how great Verizon is, and how the Zunefone surpasses the Apple phone is copies, although even today, with existing products, neither is true.
Five years? Thought it was two. (Score:4, Insightful)
Ah well, the hardware looks great and it's certainly a platform which could handle almost everything you could want from the current generation. Too bad it's going to be on a crappy, slow network run by a company which is gloating about how badly it can treat its customers due to having a monopoly.
Good news: this will make Linux-based phones much better, much sooner.
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Cingular signed a 5 year contract with Apple.
I wonder what the 'early cancelation fee' is for that contract.
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As another replier hinted, you might have misinterpreted the required two year Cingular service contract that iPhone buyers must agree to. However, I think you're correct about them being clowntards...
Also, they mentioned that the Cingular name and logo would ALWAYS be on screen. Doesn't that mean they were effectively lying about the resolution, as some of the resolution will always be used only in a user-hostile fa
Fuck Verizon (Score:3, Insightful)
And I can't help but think that I'm not the only person who feels this way. Their customer-hostile antics will eventually bite them in the ass, and I am going to enjoy watching that happen as much as I'd enjoy watching Microsoft implode - maybe more.
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I payed $600 for my Treo 700p when it came out, so the same price for an iPhone is no problem at all. (in fact, I will be buying 2
smart move (Score:4, Interesting)
people in USA are too used to these "$49 RAZR" deals that they can't possible imagine paying $499 for the iPhone. european and asian users will. now if we can get Apple to strike deals with SK Telecom or NTT DoCoMo, then u're all set.
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KDDI/au service, on the other hand, is CDMA2000 EV-DO.
iPhone to NOT be sold in Cingular stores (Score:4, Interesting)
He was a bit peeved, he's fielding 10 calls a day on the damn thing and just feels the dollars flying down the block to the Apple Store.
In Palo Alto on University Ave.
Might be common knowledge, I was suprised.
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Steve Jobs mentioned it will be available in Apple Stores AND Cingular Stores.
Premature death (Score:3, Insightful)
If they are inclined to do so (and given the hype around the iPhone), the established phone developers can come up with something very similar and have it out earlier and at a lower cost. Nokia's Aeon concept [engadgetmobile.com] looks like a promising candidate to build on as does the Siemens-Benq's Black Box [gizmodo.com] concept. In addition, IIRC the Aeon prototype was fuel cell powered.
At least from a European and especially Japanese perspective the iPhone is already severely outdated. No 3G, no GPS etc? It's a beautiful phone, but the eye candy can be imitated and cloned and used in a better phone. Assuming that the other phone companies are complete nitwits they can easily create a more attractive package and get it out earlier and cheaper.
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