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Monday, January 28, 2008

Wall Street Noticing That The Math On iPhones Doesn't Add Up

From Techdirt comes a report on a significant discrepancy between Apple and AT&T announcing numbers on iPhone sales and iPhone activations - about a difference of 1.7 million phones.

Taking into account international sales (350,000 to 400,000) and a 20% estimate on people buying iPhones solely for unlocking, there are still nearly 700,000 units unaccounted for. This suggests they are piling up as unsold inventory.

Monday, January 21, 2008

PocketGuitar Lets You Kick Out Riffs With Your iPhone

From Gizmodo -

PocketGuitar%20GI.jpg


Shinya Kasatani has released PocketGuitar for the iPhone and iPod touch, which turns your device into a touchscreen guitar. The application looks insanely great.

To get your fingers strumming, launch Installer and follow these instructions: Installer > Sources > Add http://podmap.net/apps to your repositories. PockeGuitar is filed under the Toys category. If this takes off in a big way, expect iPhone finger board extension peripherals soon.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

The Untold Story: How the iPhone Blew Up the Wireless Industry



Wired has a very interesting and revealing story on the making of the Apple iPhone, especially regarding how Steve Jobs was able to convince ATT (Cingular at that time) to offer the iPhone on HIS terms - in return for five years of exclusivity, roughly 10% of iPhone sales in ATT stores, and a thin slice of Apple's iTunes revenue.

In addition, he succeeded in getting ATT into spending millions of dollars and thousands of man-hours to create a new feature, so-called visual voicemail, and to reinvent the time-consuming in-store sign-up process. He also got a unique revenue-sharing arrangement, garnering roughly $10 a month from every iPhone customer's ATT bill.

On top of all that, Apple retained complete control over the design, manufacturing, and marketing of the iPhone. Jobs had done the unthinkable: squeezed a good deal out of one of the largest players in the entrenched wireless industry. The deal had given Jobs, and Apple, unprecedented power and effectively rewrote the book on how phone manufacturers deal with telcos.

Complete story is available here.