Analysts: 3G iPhone may reach users by midyear
By
Agam Shah
,
IDG News Service
, 02/11/2008
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Users may see an iPhone with 3G technology in the next six months, a financial analyst said Monday, citing waning inventory
of Apple's current iPhone and the increasing demand in Europe for 3G products.
The iPhone shipments are likely to be weak during the March quarter, and inclusion of third-generation (3G) technology in
the phone could ensure that Apple meets its target of shipping 10 million iPhones in 2008, analyst Richard Gardner of Citigroup
said in a research note on Monday. 3G is a high-speed wireless communications standard that provides broadband Internet capabilities
to cell phones and mobile devices.
An iPhone upgrade to include 3G technology could help the company forge more relationships with carriers as it builds a European
presence. "We believe that lack of 3G has been a significant headwind for iPhone in Europe where 3G is already pervasive,"
Gardner said.
During meetings with Citigroup, Apple reiterated its plan to introduce the iPhone into additional European countries and Asia
by the end of 2008, Gardner said.
In a December report, Shaw Wu of American Technology Research said a 3G iPhone would likely ship around the middle or in the
second half of this year, after network coverage and battery life issues are addressed.
During the iPhone rollout in the U.K. last year, Jobs said that 3G chips were "power hogs," but also said he expected to see
better battery consumption this year. Chip vendors, including Broadcom and Arm, are developing power-efficient 3G mobile chips
with multimedia capabilities.
3G is still not widely deployed in the U.S., Wu wrote in a report. Apple could possibly position the new iPhone as a high-end
smart phone, with the current iPhone being shipped as a more mainstream product, Wu said.
Apple's 3G plans in the U.S. could get a boost from AT&T's announcement last week that it was expanding its 3G wireless coverage
to 350 major U.S. markets, including all 100 of the largest cities.
Until the iPhone becomes available in more countries, unlocking numbers will remain high. But as iPhone's presence expands,
"most consumers will prefer to use iPhone on the network with which Apple has a relationship -- only then can they take advantage
of innovative features such as visual voicemail and ongoing software updates," Gardner said.
Up to 35 percent of all iPhones sold since its launch in June have been unlocked and sold in countries where Apple does not
yet have a formal relationship with a wireless carrier, Citigroup's Gardner said.
There has been plenty of speculation surrounding the release of a 3G iPhone. Last year, Apple CEO Steve Jobs and AT&T CEO
Randall Stephenson separately said a 3G iPhone was coming in 2008, though the exact date is shrouded in secrecy.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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