Australia won't see iPhone ‘til 2008

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Dan Warne09 January 2007, 11:24 PM

Salivating over the Apple iPhone announced by Steve Jobs this morning? Lick your chops and collect that drool - Apple Australia says it won't be available in Australia until 2008.

 

Salivating over the Apple iPhone announced by Steve Jobs this morning? Lick your chops and collect that drool - Apple Australia says it won't be available in Australia until 2008 -- at least a year from now.

Of course, that's not to say there won't be a healthy trade in black-market iPhones on eBay as soon as they're released in the US. Just don't expect to get them cheap.

It'll be released in the US six months from now in June (Apple hasn't even got FCC approval for the hardware yet, such is Jobs' focus on secrecy), then in Europe ‘later in the year' and Asia Pacific in 2008, according to Marketing Manager Rob Small.

Small could not say why the phone would be so delayed in the Asia Pacific region.

Pricing for the phones is not set for Australia, but Apple US said they would cost $US499 ($A639) for a 4GB version and $US599 ($A767) for an 8GB version.

However, it's likely when it does arrive that it'll be on the Telstra GSM network: it is the only network in Australia that supports the EDGE technology the phone uses for highish-speed data transfer (at about 100Kbit/s).

Apple's US-centric approach will also probably see a single carrier deal stitched-up in each region. Apple has already signed up US telco Cingular to distribute the phone exclusively in the US.

Apple's choice of EDGE (2.5G) over the more common WCDMA (3G) mobile technology is probably explained by the substantially faster CPUs available for EDGE devices.

Although Apple hasn't disclosed which CPU it is using in the phone, the likely reason for Apple's choice of EDGE over WCDMA 3G is that the sole manufacturer of WCDMA chips is Qualcomm and they're not nearly as fast as Intel's PXA chips (now divested to Marvell).

The latest PXA320 chip from Marvell runs at 820MHz, and given Apple's heavy graphical functionality in the iPhone, it's likely it has built the phone around this chip.

Until recently, most phone manufacturers have chosen the slowest chip that can viably run their software in order to eke out maximum battery life. Apple appears to have taken a different approach with the iPhone: it will only last five hours of talk/browsing/email or 16 hours of audio playback.

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David Flynn:

Depending on how 'smart' the iPhone is at handling email and attachments (especially through the touted Yahoo mobile email service which was trotted out during the keynote), 100Kbps is okay for email and surfing.

And personally, I'm happy to wait until 2008 for an iPhone. Given Apple's track record of flawed first-gen products, I'm fine with letting the US early adopters uncover any bugs so that Apple can squash 'em and have a second-gen iPhone -- probably with even higher capacity and longer battery life -- ready this time next year.



tin:

I'm not big on Apple at all, but this looks like something I'd almost actually buy...

Limitations I don't like are:
* Harsh battery life could be bad when away from home
* GSM. Not that keen on spending big on what is now old technology.
* Possibility of being available only via Telstra. I think we all know their attitude to data pricing.

If it was available now, I'd consider it. But with it only becoming available in about a year, it will likely seem silly.

camo:

can't wait!!

Anonymous:

Bad as I want it, that could be a deal killer for me. I can wait for competition and 3G and better batteries. Maybe.

Paul:

I just cannot believe why people love apple products so much.
1)For half the money you can get a mp3 player with fm radio and multi-format interface that Blows Ipod out of the water for value.
2)OS What????. Its a windows world,deal with it.
3)2008!! Im not waiting that long for anything


roundaboutmusic:

here's why:
1) Really, what device would that be? (it's an iPod world - you deal with it)
2) OSX is my way of dealing with the fact that it's a Windows world, helps me sleep at night.
3) No Vista for you then, you've been waiting far too long...

hcornea:

I love my Windows PCs (x3 in my home office), but Apple do consumer electronic devices better (ala iPod, and to some extent Macs).

The usability of this looks far better than my Windows Mobile Smartphone - but perhaps for my wife. (She owns a Mac, too)

Apaxvi:

hahahahhahahahahha, well said

john:

youre a tosser....windows is so shite...try using a mac...and you'll never go back!

bruvafromanuvamuva:

I absolutely love the iPhone but I have to say... poor battery life + fixed (i.e non-swappable) battery = big problem!

Tripp:

5 hours of video/phone/email and 16 hours of audio are really good. He did not dislose the standby time, however. The standby time is most likely in the range of 72-120 hours, so you don't have to run home twice a day to charge it unless your just watching a lot of movies or playing games all the time. Yes, I said games.

me:

You're complaining about Asia Pacific getting the phone in 2008. What are we up in Canuck land supposed to say? Canada wasn't even mentioned in the list of places getting the phone! Everything was US, Europe, Asia Pacific ... And no, Steve doesn't use US as in North America, just like we don't have movies in iTunes Store up here in Canada. Heh, enough of a rant, it's pretty damned cool device though.

GeneRayburn:

Believe me, in this case the US terminology does include Canada - almost never is a "US" release date for hardware excluding Canada, and especially not when it's gonna be a worldwide product anyway. Your iTunes reference is different as media companies like to control how music and TV is distributed in different countries, so that's why single-country music stores exist.

raindog:

For something we wont see until 2008 I'm sick of seeing it already! I know January can be a slow month for technology but really, all this fanfare for another GSM handset, and from all accounts not even a very good one? 3 sequential APC articles, informercials on technology leaders like ACA, every media news channel running a piece.
Imagine the saturation we would have seen if someone had released something even more revolutionary like say a different kind of spark plug, the news pieces would continue for days.
Come to think of it now apple has found marketing over innovation will sell form over function then all I can suggest is they get the crayons working on the new I-Plug without delay. It's sure to take the world by storm, soon there wont be a Hyundai excel out there not running 4 I-Plugs.

Grit:

The pros and cons look pretty in posts - the ten best and worst things about iphone. It could be more than a fashion statement poeple. Its awesome, however denying any 3rd party service head on is a squeak. I would just love to change over from E62 (its not bad thought its nokia too. With my contacts & calendar backed up on Zyb.com i will just sync over.. 2008 damn looks far - yep hope live though :)