TOKYO: Apple fans clamouring for the two new iPhones formed a kilometre-long queue in Tokyo on Friday, but high prices in Asia and the lack of a new tie-up in the vast China market dampened the global roll out.
The once-unbeatable smartphone has secured a lucrative new deal with Japan’s biggest mobile carrier that lent some celebrity glitz to the opening day in Tokyo, and guaranteed a lively welcome from a nation of gadget-lovers.
Diehard fans began lining up last week and even sat out a weekend storm that lashed the Japanese capital to keep their spot in a queue that grew to around a kilometre (half-a-mile) in length by opening time, police estimated.
Media helicopters hovered over Tokyo, where a man dressed as Batman waited outside the Apple store in upmarket Ginza next to a woman with a shock of pink hair and a life-size Steve Jobs pillow.
Actor Ken Watanabe, star of “Inception” and “Letters From Iwo Jima”, was on hand to welcome buyers with a handshake and a broad smile at Docomo’s main Tokyo shop, marking the new alliance between Apple and the country’s biggest carrier.
The firm, the mobile unit of NTT, which has about 42 per cent of the Japanese market, has shed more than 3.5 million subscribers to rivals since 2008, when SoftBank first rolled out the iPhone in Japan, local media have reported.
Hisako Nagashima, a 34-year-old manicurist who was waiting to snap up an iPhone 5S in gold, said it had been make-or-break time for her relationship with the company.
“If NTT Docomo had not released iPhone this time, I would have changed carriers,” she told.
It’s not about the price
There was no crush in China, where Apple had a pre-booking system to avoid a repeat of the near-riot in Beijing that hospitalised four people at the 2011 release of the iPad 2.
Those prepared to shell out a minimum 4,488 yuan ($730) for the pared down iPhone 5C, or at least 5,288 yuan ($864) for the iPhone 5S said they didn’t mind the cost.
“It’s not about the price, it’s about
the brand, I think Apple is the best,” said Chang Yi, a 29-year-old real estate salesman.
Others milling around outside the store had a different opinion.
“It’s too expensive ... it’s a luxury item,” said 19-year-old student Meng Jia. “If the price was around 2,000 yuan, I would buy one”.
Singapore’s biggest carrier, Singtel said it expected 10,000 people to pick up their new iPhones at its launch event, and that there had been a rush on the gold model.
“Our gold-colour iPhones were completely sold out within four minutes when we opened online reservations on 18 September,” said a Singtel spokesman.
While Japanese customers were offered either phone — the souped-up iPhone 5S or the stripped-down iPhone 5C — “free” with two-year contracts, in places where up-front payments are common, the sticker price stung.
“Wow, $1,129 (US$1,065) for an iPhone 5S here in Australia. That’s simply insane,” tweeted Bill Hutchison, referring to the cost of a 64GB model of the new version, which boasts a speedier processor and a fingerprint sensor.
Another, David Smith, tweeted, “Incredible — Apple charging $99 for iPhone 5C in the USA (with a contract) but $740 in Australia and its $1,200 for 5S — no wonder Android phones are popular.” The polycarbonate-bodied 5C, supposedly aimed at budget-conscious smartphone shoppers, was widely flagged as Apple’s answer to the onslaught of cheaper, Android-powered models, led by Samsung. Apple has not revealed what the “C” stands for, but did not knock down months of media speculation that it was intended to signify “cheap” or “China”.—AFP
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