Prepaid cheap international calling cards. Save up to 60% on long distance cheap phone card. You can buy phone card online in 5 minutes on our site. Select place where you want call: Europe
• Asia
• North America
• South America
• Africa
• Australia
• Middle East
(Updates shares in second paragraph.) Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Apple Inc. rose the most in three years after quarterly profit more than doubl ...
(Credit: Illustration: James Martin/CNET)
Now that the date has been confirmed, Sept. 12 could be a historic day for Apple. The iPhone will get more than a bigger screen and faster connectivity, which many competitors already have. It will also sprout wings and fly like a drone, capturing images in flight and returning to its owner like a homing pigeon, with auto-generated trip narration by Siri.
People expect big things from an Apple product launch. Perhaps not an iPhone drone, but even if it doesn't sprout wings the iPhone 5 will generate tweets and buzz that reverberate throughout the Internet on Sept. 12 (CNET will have full coverage of the event starting at 9:00 AM PT).
But will the new iPhone blow away the competition with its comely features? Unlikely, based on what has been widely rumored over the last year -- a screen 12-percent bigger than its predecessor, 4G LTE support, a smaller dock plug, a longer-lasting battery and some other bells and whistles. Some of these features have been standard on phones from rivals, but the Apple loyalists and status seekers have been patiently waiting for next coming.
As CNET's Kent German wrote about the iPhone 4S after its release:
Android fans are right: the iPhone 4S adds features that competing smartphones introduced months ago. But that misses the point. It doesn't have everything, but Apple's attention to the user experience remains unmatched. Some consider that focus a worthy trade-off for a regulated and locked-down device, while others prefer more control. Apple's philosophy isn't necessarily right, but it may be right for you. And if so, the iPhone 4S won't disappoint.
Piper Jaffray equities analyst Gene Munster predicts that sales of the new iPhone will be of historic proportions--the largest consumer electronics product upgrade in history, he said. Apple could sell between 6 and 10 million new iPhones in this month (speculation is that it will be available Sept. 21), according to Munster's calculations. For comparison, the iPhone 4S hit 4 million sales in the first three days after its launch.
As in past iPhone launches, the next generation attracts some new converts, but it primarily feeds the souls of the converted, owners of older iPhones, as well as those seeking a less perplexing buying experience.
According to an August 2012 survey from TechBargains, more than 70 percent of iPhone 4 and 3G owners plan at some point to upgrade, as well as 64 percent of 4S owners. Among the unconverted, 22 percent of Android phone users and unsurprisingly 38 percent of Blackberry users expressed interest in buying the iPhone 5, according to the survey.
In July 2012, the iPhone picked up some U.S. market share over the previous three months, as did Google's Android, while other players lost share, according to comScore. That trend should continue with the iPhone 5, but it will get more challenging to bring in new converts in 2013, after the initial iPhone 5 frenzy abates and as Android and Windows 8 phone makers, and even RIM, become more aggressive in introducing new, even innovative, products -- Apple's various lawsuits notwithstanding.
Top Smartphone Platforms: Total U.S. smartphone subscribers ages 13+. Three month average ending July 2012 vs. 3 month average ending April 2012
(Credit: comScore MobiLens)
Of course, Apple's business does just fine with one in three domestic smartphone subscribers, and there is plenty of room to grow. Just over half of U.S. subscribers have a smartphone at this juncture, and worldwide less than 40 percent of mobile handsets sold in 2012 will be smartphones, according to IDC. China and India, for example, each have about one billion mobile subscriptions, and the vast majority are non-smartphone. For Apple and its rivals, the battle has just begun.