Android phone launch day relatively quiet
By Matt Hamblen, Steve Lawson, Elizabeth Montalbano and Nancy Gohring
,
IDG News Service
, 10/22/2008
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The first day of sales for Google's Android phone hasn't quite echoed the frenzy surrounding initial iPhone sales, but a few
hardy souls across the country got up early to buy the first devices available in stores.
The G1, an HTC phone offered by T-Mobile that is the first to run Google's Android operating system, went on sale on Wednesday
at stores across the U.S. San Francisco residents had the very first opportunity to buy the phones in person, with one T-Mobile
store there opening on Tuesday evening.
In addition, many people who pre-ordered the G1 started receiving their handsets in the mail on Tuesday.
On the East Coast, five people stood in line in drizzle and 40-degree temperatures to buy G1 phones at the Harvard Square
T-Mobile location in Cambridge, Massachusetts. At 8 a.m. the store door opened, and they were quickly ushered inside to be
served.
The small crowd was nothing compared with sales of the iPhone 3G in July in nearby downtown Boston, where hundreds of customers
waited in line, some of them for several days.
But a T-Mobile manager said he was still pleased with the turnout, which remained fairly steady through the early morning
hours. The gloomy skies and sudden colder, rainy weather might have dampered sales, several T-Mobile representatives at the
store said.
Jonathan Blood, national director of business development for T-Mobile, said in an interview at the store that there were
200 G1 phones on sale at the Cambridge store, which stands across the street from Harvard University and a few blocks from
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Blood said the biggest sales of the G1 apparently occurred at a downtown Boston T-Mobile-owned retail store that sold 20 in
the first hour. There are 13 T-Mobile-owned stores in the Boston area, but about 50 retailers, including T-Mobile affiliate
stores in the area, were carrying the phone, he said.
T-Mobile shop workers in other stores were more reluctant to talk to reporters. In downtown Manhattan, an employee named Ariel,
who declined to give his last name, said there was a line of people waiting outside the store when it opened at 8 a.m., but
he did not say how many G1 customers were in it. He noted that people were there not only for the G1, but also "for other
things," adding that sometimes there is a line outside the store before opening even on a normal business day.
Ariel said there was a "steady stream" of customers coming into the store to purchase the G1, but declined to say how many
the store had sold. At about 11:15 a.m., there were no customers in the store, and salespeople were lined up near the front
of the store chatting with one another. T-Mobile already took a considerable amount of preorders for the G1 online, which
could account for the lack of customers in the store, he said.
The manager of one T-Mobile store on Canal Street, which had no customers at about 11:30 a.m., said the store sold out of
G1s in two hours, but was still accepting customers who wanted to order the phone. The store manager, who declined to give
his name because he said T-Mobile's corporate office had instructed employees not to speak to the press, would not say how
many G1s the store had stocked. He did acknowledge the location was one of the smaller T-Mobile stores in the city.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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