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New iPhone draws Apple fans, Jobs tributes
New iPhone draws Apple fans, Jobs tributes
Apple's new iPhone went on sale in stores across the globe on Friday, prompting thousands, including Canadians and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, to queue around city blocks to snap up the final gadget unveiled during Steve Jobs' life.
Queues wound down the street in Montreal and in a Toronto mall, just as they did in Sydney, Tokyo, London, Paris and Munich as fans gathered to get their hands on the iPhone 4S.
"I am a fan, a big fan. I want something to remember Steve Jobs by," said Haruko Shiraishi, waiting patiently with her Yorkshire terrier, Miu Miu, at the end of an eight-block queue in Tokyo's smart Ginza shopping district.
In Montreal hundreds of people lined up in the rain Friday morning outside the Apple store on Ste. Catherine St., waiting for the doors to open.
The new model looks similar to the previous iPhone 4 but has an upgraded camera, faster processor and highly regarded voice-activated software, which allows users to ask questions.
"It's like your own personal secretary," said Shane Gray, 42, in Sydney.
The phone — introduced just a day before Jobs died -- was initially dubbed a disappointment because it fell short of being a revolution in design, but glowing reviews centered around its "Siri" voice-activated software have helped it set a record pace in initial, online sales orders.
Apple CEO Tim Cook and his executive team hope the first device sold without their visionary leader at the helm will protect them against a growing challenge from the likes of Samsung Electronics.
The South Korean firm, Apple's arch-rival with smartphones powered by Google's Android software, expects to overtake it as the world's biggest smartphone vendor in terms of units sold in the third quarter.
"(Jobs) made everything better and the products he released were thought through in such detail," Duncan Hoare in London said, after a loud roar greeted the opening of the store.
"It was about the beauty of something and the simplicity."
Wozniak showed his fondness for Jobs, his fellow Apple co-founder, by camping out overnight for the latest iPhone.
"The long wait begins. I'm first in line," Wozniak posted on his Twitter feed on Thursday from outside an Apple store in Los Gatos, California, in the heart of Silicon Valley.
"The guy ahead was on the wrong side and he's pissed."
Wozniak, now 61, founded Apple with Jobs in 1976. Last week Wozniak said he was "dumbfounded" by the news of his friend's death.
Apple does not release sales figures on launch day, so gauging initial sales is difficult. However it took more than 1 million online orders in the first 24 hours after its release, exceeding the 600,000 for the iPhone 4, though that model was sold in fewer countries initially.
"Despite the initial disappointment that this wasn't an iPhone 5, the reality is we're still seeing the usual frenzy that we've got used to on launch day," analyst Ben Wood at CCS Insight told Reuters, adding that analysts expect a few million phones to be sold globally on the first weekend.
Unlike many in Tokyo, shoppers in European cities told Reuters they wanted the phone because it was a 'lifestyle choice' and not necessarily a tribute to Jobs.
"I need a new one since my dog destroyed my old 3GS," said Gaby Wunder-Sambale, 45, shivering in Frankfurt. |
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