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Few customers lining up for Verizon's iPhone

Narmer

Diamond Member
I guess Apple's attempt to engineer scarcity by "running out" of pre-orders did not galvanize enough people. Oddly, the short lines have not been mentioned on Engadget. Hmmm...

http://www.cnn.com/2011/TECH/mobile/02/10/verizon.iphone/index.html

Few customers lining up for Verizon's iPhone

(CNN) -- After years of anticipation, relatively few people waited in line Thursday morning to buy the new Verizon Wireless iPhone 4, according to anecdotal reports.
Fifteen minutes before the phone went on sale, eight people were in line at Apple's flagship store in New York, according to CNNMoney. Down the street, about a dozen people waited in line at a Verizon Wireless store.
And in Atlanta, Georgia, slightly more than a dozen stood in line outside a Verizon store to get the new phone. One of them, Lena Hill, 22, brought food and blankets at 6:15 a.m., expecting to have to camp out in a line to get the device. There wasn't a line, so Hill just waited in her car.
"It's an iPhone. There's so much hype about it," she said. "You just have to get it."
In San Francisco, there were no shoppers lined up early Thursday at an Apple store downtown, and only a small line at a nearby Verizon store.
By contrast, thousands have lined up for the release of previous Apple products, including the initial launch of the iPhone 4 in June. In the past, many shoppers have even slept outside all night to ensure being among the first to get a new Apple gadget.
The Verizon iPhone's hardware is similar to the existing iPhone -- the big difference being that it works on Verizon's network instead of AT&T, which has had exclusive rights as the iPhone's wireless carrier since 2007.
The new iPhone went on sale at 7 a.m. Thursday at Verizon and Apple stores, at Best Buy and on the retailer's websites. With a two-year contract, it retails for $199 for the 16GB model and $299 for the 32GB model.
iReport: Are you getting a Verizon iPhone?
Customers were able to pre-order the Verizon iPhone last week, and analysts estimate between 250,000 and 1 million of the phones were sold on pre-order, making it among the biggest phone debuts on the Verizon network.
Pre-orders for the phone sold out within a day, according to Mashable. The phone became available again available for internet purchase Wednesday.
Customers have been calling for Apple to offer the iPhone on networks other than AT&T for years, in part because that network is known for dropped calls.
Consumer Reports surveys consistently rank AT&T below competitors in terms of customer satisfaction. Larger cities, such as New York and San Francisco, have experienced particular problems with dropped calls and a lack of mobile broadband service on AT&T, to a certain degree because so many data-heavy iPhone users contributed to jamming the network.
Alex Ricker, a 28-year-old who bought a Verizon iPhone in Atlanta, said she waited on an upgrade for eight months to get the iPhone on Verizon and never would have considered switching to AT&T to get the phone.
"I looked at all the other smartphones and they just -- they were really bulky and quite expensive, and I felt like waiting," she said.
Bob Nadolski, 45, said his daughter begged him to switch his family's cell phone plan from Verizon to AT&T so she could get an iPhone.
"I personally have not had great voice service through AT&T" on a work account, he said. "Where we live, Verizon has better coverage, so I would never switch the family plan to AT&T."
Nadolski bought his daughter the Verizon iPhone on Thursday and said she had been waiting "very patiently" for the phone.
Switching carriers to get an iPhone isn't easy.
First, owners of a current iPhone can't simply switch from AT&T to Verizon. They'll need to buy a new phone. And that's on top of early-termination fees of up to $325 they'll have to pay to break their current contract.
Some were still willing to make the leap.
Lauren Asther, 19, told CNNMoney she was switching to Verizon for the iPhone. "I have the AT&T phone, and it kept dropping calls," she said.
The cold weather may have contributed to smaller-than-usual lines.
"Apple clearly was expecting more of a crowd this morning," CNET wrote on a live blog from New York. "As I mentioned earlier, the Apple staff way out-numbered actual Verizon iPhone 4 customers. I guess we finally have the answer to the question: What will keep people from standing in line for a new iPhone on launch day? It looks like 20-degree temperatures."
 
CNBC sent out a reporter to a NY Apple store. There were two people in line, the first one because he decided at the last minute to change from AT&T to Verizon due to his AT&T dropping service five times the day before. lol.
 
The days of waiting in monstrous lines for an iPhone ended around the iPhone 3GS. Now you can just preorder 2 weeks ahead of release and pick up anytime during the day at your leisure and guarantee to get one.
 
I would have gotten an iPhone when they came out, but AT&T "service" is atrocious where I live. To the point where I can not make or receive a call on an ATT phone when I am at home: I have to drive elsewhere. As you all can imagine, that is completely unacceptable.


Now I have an Android, and see no reason to get an iPhone.
 
Maybe Verizon customers are generally smarter and/or more patient? Maybe they realize it's easier to get the phone online than to stand out in the cold weather?
Or maybe they're happy with their Android phone and don't want a freaking iphone??
 
What? I read the other day that the online sales set new records for any phone, even brand new launches?

What? I read the other day not to believe everything I read? It even said to use question marks after making statements.

So do I uh....believe what I read or not? Not sure....

if srs.
 
Who cares? Anybody who is nuts enough to stand in line for an iphone has had one for months already. And people are still stuck in contract with ATT and will be for years still. I know I just bought the iphone 4 so I have 1.5 years left with them. I'm sure tens of thousands are in the same boat. How could anybody expect anything different? I'm surprised it sold out at all.
 
Maybe people have better things to do with their lives, and are willing to wait a few days after the release date to get their iPhone? People who waste their time waiting in hours long lines for the latest gadget are idiots.
 
Maybe Verizon customers are generally smarter and/or more patient? Maybe they realize it's easier to get the phone online than to stand out in the cold weather?
Or maybe they're happy with their Android phone and don't want a freaking iphone??

Sucker! The iphone has apps for everything. I even bought the "where'd I park" app. Brilliant! Next I'll try the "where should I eat" app so I'll never have to use my brain ever again.
 
I'm guessing most of the people who wanted one real bad got in on the pre order and the rest have better things to do on a Thursday like work and will go another day.
 
Call me crazy, but I'd say setting sales records trumps number of people lined up outside a store to get a phone. The fact the iPhone 4 has been on another network for half a year, and it still broke Verizon records for # of phones sold pre launch is pretty damn impressive.
 
This.

I had an iPhone. My Droid X is so much nicer.
I had an iPhone 3G, and I've been in my Droid X since early December. True, the Droid X is much faster and I think that the camera is great, but I expect that from a phone that's 2 years newer. I love Google, use GMail, use several Google products. Don't own any Apple products except for the iPhone.

Can't say that I'm impressed with the Droid X like I had hoped. Just not as polished; lots of things seem non-intuitive. Couldn't get myself to buy an iPhone 4, but I'd seriously consider switching to the iPhone 5 if they fix and include enough of what's missing from the iPhone 4.

I've never broken a mobile phone contract (nearly 10 years of mobile phone usage, I remember when 1 year contracts were normal). I'd consider breaking a contract to ditch the Droid X.
 
Sucker! The iphone has apps for everything. I even bought the "where'd I park" app. Brilliant! Next I'll try the "where should I eat" app so I'll never have to use my brain ever again.

There's a great slogan. "The iPhone ... for people who don't think!"
 
I had an iPhone 3G, and I've been in my Droid X since early December. True, the Droid X is much faster and I think that the camera is great, but I expect that from a phone that's 2 years newer. I love Google, use GMail, use several Google products. Don't own any Apple products except for the iPhone.

Can't say that I'm impressed with the Droid X like I had hoped. Just not as polished; lots of things seem non-intuitive. Couldn't get myself to buy an iPhone 4, but I'd seriously consider switching to the iPhone 5 if they fix and include enough of what's missing from the iPhone 4.

I've never broken a mobile phone contract (nearly 10 years of mobile phone usage, I remember when 1 year contracts were normal). I'd consider breaking a contract to ditch the Droid X.

Bah, there is a small learning curve, but it appears you're just afraid of change. 😛
 
The iPhone 4 sold out in pre-orders for existing customers. Basically, no one really switched from other carriers to Verizon just for the iPhone 4.
 
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