FACTS: APPLE iPHONE

Files under Apple, Blackberry, ISuppli, Motorola, Nokia, Palm, Reuters, Samsung, iPhone | Sep 4th

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Apple’s iPhone outsold all smartphones in the United States in July, its first full month on sale, research group iSuppli said on Tuesday.

ISuppli reiterated its forecast that Apple would sell 4.5 million iPhones this year, rising to more than 30 million in 2011.

The two models of the iPhone sold more than Research in Motion’s Blackberry series, the entire Palm portfolio and any individual smartphone model from Motorola, Nokia or Samsung.

The iPhone will be the bestselling Christmas phone in the country.

Wait and see.

(Picture by Reuters)



THE BLACKBERRY AND PALM REACTION TO THE APPLE iPHONE

Files under Apple, Blackberry, Palm, iPhone | Jun 29th

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This was the reaction of the market in January 2007 after Apple announced the launch of the iPhone.

They are more astonished than ever.

Words from the CEO of Palm:

“I’ve never seen the kind of feeding frenzy we’ve seen in the media,” Ed Colligan said.

“We expect it to be a very successful product, but I don’t know how it can possibly live up to the hype.”

Read here their first reactions.



APPLE iPHONE: ANY DOUBTS?

Files under Apple, Blackberry, Nokia, Palm, Samsung, iPhone | Jun 28th

In case of doubt, just compare.

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WALTER MOSSBERG ON THE APPLE iPHONE

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On the Wired Campus, Jeffrey R. Young reports:

Walter S. Mossberg, The Wall Street Journal’s personal-technology columnist, picked up his review copy of the Apple iPhone this morning (June 11), and he gave his initial impressions of the much-anticipated gadget to college leaders during a speech at The Chronicle’s Presidents Forum (…)

“I don’t know whether I’ll give it a good review or not,” he said, noting that he will use the phone for the next couple of weeks before writing his review.

“I can already see some things I don’t like about it. I see some other things that I do like a lot about it.”

He said a crucial question was whether the iPhone’s touch-screen keypad is an adequate replacement for the keyboards on BlackBerries and other advanced cellphones.

“They are claiming that through clever software they have figured out a way for this to be actually far more accurate and efficient than you think it will be, and I’m testing that proposition,” he said.

“And I can tell you that in the first hour it works a little better than I thought, but I’m still not sure it works as well as a regular keyboard — and the first hour is not a very fair test, so I’m going to keep going at it.”

Mr. Mossberg named cellphones as one of the top three technologies to watch at the moment, arguing that the era of the PC is ending (…)

“This is the next level or elevation of the cellphone,” he said of the iPhone.

“Not because it’s better or necessarily better than your Blackberry … but this runs a real computer operating system” and therefore can offer full-featured e-mail software on the go.