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Last American (Wireless) Virgin

Monday, July 14th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

It’s becoming a rite of summer: as the mercury rises, Apple introduces a new version of its iPhone. And as the new-and-improved device went on sale last week, campers once again lined the sidewalk in midtown Manhattan. The new iPhone features faster Web browsing, clearer audio and basic GPS functions; so far, reviews have been mostly positive. But as early adopters clamor for this latest high-tech status symbol, let us consider the group at the other end of the wireless bell curve: the one in seven Americans who still don’t have a cell phone.

According to the latest data, the U.S. “adoption rate” for mobile phones stands at 85 percent. That’s higher than the percentage of Americans who have DVD players (84 percent), home PCs (80 percent), digital cameras (69 percent) or MP3 players (40 percent), according to the Nielsen Co. “The concept that within my lifetime we’d have the kind of penetration we have today is unimaginable,” says Martin Cooper, 79, the former Motorola researcher who invented the portable cell phone in 1973. But for wireless providers, it’s a mixed blessing. With fewer virgin customers to bring online, the industry’s subscriber base grew by just 8.8 percent in 2007. To keep revenues rising, the big carriers are focused mostly on stealing each others’ existing customers and getting mobile users to spend more on ringtones, streaming music and other add-ons. But a handful of start-ups are aggressively pursing wireless holdouts. The bulk of the un-mobile fall into three groups, says senior analyst Chris Collins of Yankee Group: children, the elderly and the credit-challenged. (There’s actually a fourth group, prison inmates, but companies haven’t yet found a way to target that elusive niche.)

Lots of parents have mixed feelings about kids’ having phones, but they’re showing up in school backpacks at earlier ages. By some estimates, half the country’s 28 million 8- to 14-year-olds already have handsets of their own. To attract these youngsters, big carriers all offer discounted “family plans,” but lately smaller companies have tried to sell phones and service plans designed specifically for kids. Among the latest entries is one from a company called kajeet. Its phones allow parents to set limits on calls or texts; remotely turn off the device during school hours, or block calls or texts from bullies. To prevent surprise $300 monthly bills, kajeet features a pay-in-advance system, with a basic charge of $10 a month and 10 cents per minute. CEO Daniel Neal says consumers are becoming more averse to the “hidden gotchas”—cancellation fees, service fees and random charges—found in typical wireless plans. Neal believes 80 percent of the 8-to-14 crowd will have a phone within three years.

Fear of runaway bills is a hurdle for elderly consumers, too. But more of them (and their adult children) are becoming convinced it’s good to have a phone handy for emergencies. To appeal to this crowd, last year Jitterbug began selling a $147 phone with an uncluttered keyboard, a huge display and other elder-friendly features (including a $15-per-month, 30-minute rate plan). It has no camera or text messaging, and if a user gets confused while making a call, he can hit zero and ask an operator to connect him to someone on his contact list. Jitterbug hopes the phones may have appeal beyond the elderly: in a May survey it commissioned, 32 percent of mobile subscribers said their current phone has more features than they know how to use. “Simplicity is really the cornerstone of our business,” says cofounder Arlene Harris.

For consumers without bank accounts or credit scores—the third big group of cell-phone holdouts—prepaid phones have long offered an alternative to traditional wireless contracts. Lately, per-minute charges have come down from 35 cents to 10 cents, and companies have offered a better variety of phones; as a result, prepaid phones have been the fastest-growing segment of the cell business. Even so, companies are trying new ways to make them appealing. Trumpet Mobile, which began selling prepaid phones in Radio Shack stores last year, gives customers a phone, a prepaid debit card and the ability to send money via mobile phone using Western Union. Trumpet hopes its service becomes popular among Latino immigrants, who are already using it to send money to relatives overseas.

While these start-ups are long on imagination, so far none will say exactly how many customers they’ve signed up. That leads observers to believe their numbers are low and their odds of survival are unclear. Indeed, one reason big wireless companies haven’t chased the holdouts more aggressively is that they aren’t likely to spend $49 per month—the amount of the average U.S. mobile customer’s bill—making them only marginally profitable (if not unprofitable). And while parts of Europe and Asia feature wireless penetration rates above 100 percent (thanks to people who carry multiple phones), no one is ready to bet when America may hit the magic number, partly because our country still has rural areas with poor coverage. “There is some argument that it will never get there—that it will never be cost-effective,” says Richard Siber, a veteran industry consultant. So even as the early adopters keep buying phones full of new tricks, there will remain at least a smattering of folks who can’t be blamed for the obnoxious ringtones that have become so much a part of life in our wireless age.

Source — Newsweek

Glitches Mar Apple’s iPhone Debut

Friday, July 11th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

NEW YORK (Fortune) – The new Apple iPhone went on sale Friday morning, but early reports of software problems overshadowed the debut of the faster, cheaper device.

As eager buyers flocked to Apple stores, news sites chronicled reports that Apple’s iTunes store was struggling with a massive outage that prevented buyers from activating their phones.

Apple’s new iPhone is built on third-generation, or 3G, technology that is speedier than the original iPhone’s network.

As Fortune.com first reported, AT&T, the iPhone’s exclusive carrier in the United States, cut the price of the iPhone in half: an 8-GB model sells for $199, or $200 less than the original iPhone. A 16-GB version costs $299.

The Apple Store on New York City’s tony Fifth Avenue, which drew a crowd of 150 people just after 5:00 a.m. ET, was moving customers through the line in about 10 minutes per customer when the doors opened at 8:00 a.m., according to Fortune’s Philip Elmer-DeWitt.

High expectations

But problems soon appeared. Elmer-DeWitt, who live-blogged from the store, was one of the first to report difficulty setting up his new phone. Eventually he was told, along with other customers, to go home and try to activate his device later.

Elmer-DeWitt was able to get his phone to work about three hours after his purchase. By early afternoon, there were more anecdotal reports online of users completing the activation process.

The system crash affected buyers throughout the 21countries where the new iPhone debuted Friday. Owners of the original iPhone and the iPod touch looking to upgrade their software were also hobbled by the breakdown.

The iTunes outage wasn’t the only glitch Apple customers encountered Friday. Users attempting to sign up for MobileMe, which synchs e-mail and other data across Mac devices, also experienced technical problems, according to the Associated Press. Apple began offering the $99-a-year service Friday.

The iPhone 3G rollout was in stark contrast to last year’s debut, when hordes of eager buyers camped out for days at Apple stores around the country and the purchasing process went off without a hitch - at least on Apple’s end. AT&T, meanwhile, was hounded with activation problems.

On Friday, AT&T was quick to pin the blame on Apple. “There’s a worldwide issue with iTunes that Apple is working to resolve,” an AT&T representative said in an e-mail. Apple did not respond to a request for comment.

Early hangups aside, one analyst predicted Friday that the second version of the iPhone will have a stronger debut than its predecessor.

One major reason: Apple is releasing the 3G model around the world on Friday. The original iPhone was rolled out from country to country over the course of the last year.

“Based on on pent up demand, expanded distribution, lower pricing,” RBC analyst Mike Abramsky wrote in a research note Friday, “Apple ships 1 million 3G iPhones in the first weekend.” Abramsky said that would be roughly four times the number of iPhones shipped during the same time frame last year.

Apple sold more than 6 million original iPhones.

Some analysts warn that expectations for the new iPhone are too high. For one thing, the economy is a lot weaker than it was a year ago. Consumers may not no so eager to shell out the $2,200 or more it would cost for the iPhone and the mandatory two-year subscription.

Early reviews were more subdued than the glowing critiques of the first iPhone.

David Pogue of the New York Times called the iPhone 3G “a nice upgrade,” but suggested it wasn’t something existing iPhone owners should rush out and buy. The real novelty, Pogue said, was the App Store, where owners of the old and new iPhone can purchase games and other software - most for $9.99 or less.

Source — CNN