Apple's New Strategy: Sell Pricier iPhones First (wsj.com) 115
The staggered release gives the company a month to sell higher-end models without cheaper competition from itself. WSJ: This year, according to people familiar with Apple's production plans, the company prioritized production of its two pricier OLED models, the iPhone XS and XS Max, whose prices start at about $1,000. Both will hit stores Friday, followed five weeks later by the least expensive new model, the XR, which has an LCD screen and a starting price of $749. The staggered release gives Apple a month to sell the higher-end models without cheaper competition from itself. It also simplifies logistics and retail demands and could strengthen Apple's ability to forecast sales and production of all three models through the Christmas holidays, analysts and supply chain experts said. "It's sort of a Dutch auction," said Josh Lowitz, co-founder of research firm Consumer Intelligence Research Partners, referring to the practice of starting with a high asking price, then lowering it until a buyer accepts. "The people who are most committed will pay to get early access. Then you get to the people who are making a choice and may settle for the $750 phone. This could become the new normal."
It's more about skimming the cream (Score:4, Informative)
It seems like a great idea (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't really see a downside here, to me it seems like an excellent approach - by selling the top end models first, you are treating them as something more special.
Those who want to wait for the slightly lower priced Xr won't mind a delay much, and they can judge if it's worth spending more to have a nicer model earlier.
Personally I am really curious to see both the Xr and Xs Max side by side, to compare screens... I don't plan to get a phone update this year but I think seeing those two would be a really good way to contrast a great OLED against a great LCD screen. Some have said OLED screens do not appear to be quite as sharp and I think I can see what they are talking about, but the two latest larger models should present the best side by side comparison to really tell.
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We can also say that they are making it cheaper for people who can wait. Plain and planned charity. That's just a question of perspective. In reality, it is a mix of both. Well, maybe not the charity part, we are all greedy, including the people who make up Apple.
Personally, I am in favor of making people pay for privileges, because globally, it makes things cheaper for those who don't need these privileges. For example, I don't mind the variable pricing now common with airlines. For example, when I see a s
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Well, they got *me* . . .
I absolutely need a new phone immediately. As in, ran the last one over with one of my Cadillacs and have been desperately holding out.
And we've already used up all the older spares.
So I leave in half an hour to pick up my new nanny.
And things had been *so* peaceful . . .
hawk
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I see it more as "Apple is prioritizing building the phones people want to buy" which happen to be the newest phones, and which happen to be the most expensive.
The Xr is basically a repackabed iPhone X, minus OLED screen (replaced with LCD). If you wanted an iPhone X-style phone, you either want an Xs coming out, or you would've just bought the iPhone X already. Thus really, selling iPhone Xr units on day 1 wouldn't generate a ton of new sales and it takes away from manufacture of the phone people really wa
What? (Score:3, Funny)
$1000 phones are surreal. (Score:3, Insightful)
Any person that pays $1000 for a phone, Apple or not, is bat shit crazy, or bat shit rich.
That phones does not make miracles people!!! Wake up...
A $200 phone does 97% of what an $1000 phone can do.
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Any person that pays $1000 for a phone, Apple or not, is bat shit crazy, or bat shit rich.
Fortunately most of us haven't bought phones for many years. Pocket computers which can make calls on the other hand...
A $200 phone does 97% of what an $1000 phone can do.
In terms of dollar per frustration with a slow piece of shit I would say it does more like 297%
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Define very fast. I bet you mine is faster. Can it multitask as well as mine? Does it playback 6K videos smoothly? Will it chug trying to find text in a 450 page PDF document?
If you answered no to any of the above then you don't have a "very fast" pocket computer. You have a basic one suitable for plebs who treat it like a phone with a Facebook app.
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"most of us" includes a ton of people who just have a phone because they need one...not because they use any of the features.
If "most of us" is meant to include the tech-friendly generations then upgrades are about every two years.
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"most of us" includes a ton of people who just have a phone because they need one...not because they use any of the features.
Then my friend you bought the wrong device. May I suggest next time you send $1000 my way and I'll send you a $300 device back.
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I think the top end iPhone is probably worth closer to $600, but if Apple can get people to pay $1000 who am I to stop them. No one
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Wake up...A $200 phone does 97% of what an $1000 phone can do.
And my $60 J3 Luna does 100% of everything I need it to do, and will be in service for me for years to come. Just sayin' :)
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Any person that pays $1000 for a phone, Apple or not, is bat shit crazy, or bat shit rich.
This meme (yes, millennials, I'm using the word correctly) goes around every time Apple releases a new phone. $1,000 is roughly about a year's worth of cable TV, or a pack-every-other-day cigarette habit, or a $4.25 Starbucks latte every weekday. In the grand scheme of things people spend money on, a new smartphone that you'll use for at least a year, is not really that expensive.
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Like a $20'000 car does 97% of what a $100'000 car does, yet some people still buy luxury cars.
I spend more time in front of my phone than sitting in my car, so spending an additional 800$ each 3 years on my new phone doesn't feel so surreal.
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I was OK with the $500 phones, tolerated the $600 phones...kind of suffered through the $700 phones because they we're mini tablets (Galaxy Note)...
But this new $1k+ standard for a phone is utterly, completely ridiculous. It's a mini computer, I get it...but nothing it does is so much more fantastic than a much more basic phone (except the camera).
iOS 11 -> 12 is MUCH more of an improvement than iPhone X -> XS ... and even that is pretty minor. It's not about being a Luddite here, it's the simple tr
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If you use your phone for a good amount of time every day, why not spend $1/day?
I guess that's about paying what something is really worth. By your logic, maybe doctors should charge US$ 3000 for an appointment. Why not spend it? It's your health we are talking about!
I make that much money in like a minute. It's worth it to me.
Well, then I guess phones could cost 10x more and you would be alright about it. Hey, it's just ten minutes! It's worth it to you!
Re: $1000 phones are surreal. (Score:1)
A junky rationalizing his addiction.
I only spend $ on drugs.
What? Smartphones? Did I mention who gives a fuck? (Score:2)
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The why not buy an iPhone? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm a maker not a taker.
If you were really a maker you would seek great tools.
I've got no use for a spying
Apple does not spy. They do not need to as they sell hardware, not you.
, expensive
Even $1k for a powerful computing device you keep at your side for three+ years is not expensive.
closed-source
Sigh. [apple.com]
sealed battery
All batteries are sealed, or else there would be quite a mess.
Or did you mean you could remove the battery? Funny, you claim to be a "Maker" and yet you are afraid to open a phone case to change a battery manually (which you'd only have to do every 2-3 years)??
Or did you mean you want a second battery, again if you were actually a maker you'd appreciate the flexibility of carrying around an external battery that could recharge any number of different USB devices instead of some lame proprietary internal battery that you have to throw away with your phone.
crippled computing device with no keyboard.
In what way crippled? And rather than "no keyboard" is has an infinite number of keyboards.
If you really have to have a physical keyboard for a phone then why not get one [amazon.com]? That's the nice thing about buying popular hardware, is that you can expand it almost in whatever way you like.
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So where exactly is the iOS source? Or do you think for instance MS open sourcing something (they have) makes them open source?
Re:The why not buy an iPhone? (Score:4, Funny)
Appleopen sources Xnu, the kernel. They open source Webkit, they open source Swift, they open source LLVM...
It's not just one or two things, it's almost everything except for Springboard (the iOS app launcher).
No it's not all open source. But it's also not even mostly closed source, so it's wrong to claim that it's a closed-source system when so much of it is open.
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Where is the source code for their camera, fingerprint, wifi or cellular network drivers? It must be part of that XNU kernel source, right? Have you actually tried to compile that kernel and run it on an iPhone? It must work, right?
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Or did you mean you could remove the battery? Funny, you claim to be a "Maker" and yet you are afraid to open a phone case to change a battery manually (which you'd only have to do every 2-3 years)?
I like taking spare batteries for my gadgets on adventures (backpacking, sailing, long-distance cycling or swimming). They're more compact than external battery top-up devices, and they mean you can get full charge instantly rather than keeping the two things tethered for hours. This last point can be important depending on your holster/mount for your gadget.
Wrong, external chargers way better (Score:2)
I like taking spare batteries for my gadgets on adventures (backpacking, sailing, long-distance cycling or swimming). They're more compact than external battery top-up devices
I don't see how you can say that when external batteries come in any form factor you like, from incredibly small to large but extremely powerful.
I like external chargers more because they give me way more options for act I might need to do than carrying around extra phone batteries ever did. They can also support fast-charge so while
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closed-source
Sigh. [apple.com]
Just because Apple releases some open source software doesn't make iOS open source. It is not only closed source like Windows, but unlike Windows, Apple does everything it can to ban sideloading of software, or at least mass market distribution through that channel.
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Smartphones are devices for consumers.
Oh, the old "I'm saving money using a dumbphone" argument. I assume you must never buy anything retail or dine out, right? My phone has likely paid for itself several times over in terms of looking up deals (slickdeals/retailmenot), comparison shopping/price matching while in a store, finding the cheapest gasoline (yeah, there's an app for that), and promotional freebies (I've gotten Amazon gift cards from Coke, free food from Chick-Fil-A, etc.)
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I bet they know everything about you, even your condom size.
Major retailers will probably find a way to do this even for the cash-carrying luddites, using facial recognition (utilizing the many security cameras already present). The privacy ship has sailed, may as well make the best of it.
Smaller phones? (Score:5, Interesting)
Every company seems to be in love with big phones. Can anyone recommend an Android phone with a 4” (or thereabouts) screen? My wife currently has an iPhone SE, and she’s adamant that she doesn’t want a phone larger than that.
I’m going to keep using my 6S for as long as I practically can... but then I’ll probably move on from Apple too. Smartphones are basically commodities at this point... paying the ludicrous premium for any of these companies’ flagship phones is not something I’m willing to do.
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The iPhone SE has dimensions of 123.8 x 58.6 x 7.6 mm
You can use the Phone Finder at GSM Arena [gsmarena.com] to find a phone that matches your criteria. There really aren't many current phones that are the same size or smaller than the iPhone SE. Don't look at screensize though. Look at actual phone dimensions, because bezels have become a lot smaller in recent years. Something like the Sony Xperia XZ1 Compact [gsmarena.com] is probably going to be about as small as you can get.
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Personally I want a simplified “dinner out” iPhone
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> an iPhone SE, and sheâ(TM)s adamant that she doesnâ(TM)t want a phone larger than that.
Indeed, the reason that the iphone stayed so small so long, and then first grew only taller, was to that a woman's thumb could reach the entire screen . . . (leaving folks with hands like mine unable to tap the near side; every strategy has holes . . .)
hawk
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Can anyone recommend an Android phone with a 4” (or thereabouts) screen?
Android phone manufacturers abandoned smaller phones with decent hardware specs ages ago. Apple just recently did it. I'm personally not a fan of gargantuan screens, either. My recommendation would be get an iPhone 8 and drive it until the wheels fall off. Hopefully by then, "small" might come back into style.
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No kidding. I don't want big smartphones, Apple. I love 4S' size to fit in my small hands and pockets.
Market research? (Score:3)
I think it might be noteworthy that they did exactly the opposite last year, with the iPhone 8/8+ available on 9/22 and the iPhone X available on 11/3. The most obvious explanation in that particular case was production delays... but what if it was less about practical issues and more about exploring the market? I mean, I know that I for one pre-ordered an iPhone X straightaway, and ignored the iPhone 8 entirely... but I dunno; maybe that mode of thinking only matches the crazy ones. (Or maybe not.) Perhaps most people want either whatever is available immediately (instant gratification) or whatever is cheapest. Last year, you could get both of those things at once... this year, you have to choose... but you can get their best options straightaway.
And both last year's roll-out and this year's roll-out are perfectly valid marketing methodologies.
The secret is... (Score:1)
And your point is...? (Score:1)
If they wanted to be somehow evil... (Score:2)
If they wanted to be somehow evil, they'd not say ANYTHING about the XR until it was released.
The problem with this argument ... (Score:3)
Normal (Score:2)
Etruscans and Romans also sold their expensive apples first, thousands of years ago.
7 years ago (Score:1)
Apple Fanboy current and since 1981 here.
Even check my stupid username.
Fuck Apple.
FUCK APPLE.
Apple died as Steve Jobs was dying.
One proof among hundreds:
2011.
Mac OS X 10.7 Lion.
No "save as" function.
SMFH.
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Once Blackberry gave up their secure messaging service cracks to Governments they immediately became less popular.