Apple and Verizon Wireless stores, along with Best Buy and selected Wal-Mart stores, will from from the Verizon start selling iPhones at 7 pm local time. And even with a high of 28 degrees forecast for New York City, eager iPhone fans are expected to line up around the block at stores Throughout the city.
It's unclear how many iPhones will from from today be available. Apple and Verizon Quickly sold out of the initial batch of iPhones That the resource persons were the resource persons made available through a presale to Verizon customers last week. In fact, Verizon said that demand for the iPhone surpassed any other previous four launch smartphone on its network, Including the hotly anticipated Motorola Droid and Droid X, as well as the HTC Incredible.
In an effort to move the sales process along more Quickly, Apple has been taking online reservations for customers buying the phone in its retail stores. Customers with reservations pick up Cans reserved Their after-noon iPhones in Apple stores.
But Some people, of course, just like the Thrill of waiting in line. That's why many journalists is sending out a crew of Reporters and photographers to document the Occasion. I'll be on location at the Apple Cube on Fifth Avenue in New York City, updating a blog with pictures and snippets from the crowd. Also I'll be in front of the camera putting together a story this rberita fo.
Daniel Terdiman be Earnest Also contributing to the blog from the West Coast, he will from of Nowhere Provide commentary from the Apple scene in San Francisco. For the latest news and pictures from the Verizon iPhone launch, bookmark this page and be sure to check back early Thursday morning and Throughout the day.
New York 7:07 a.m. ET: People are in the Apple store. The line of about 10 people was quickly ushered in at 7 a.m. We are now waiting to talk to people who are walking out of the store.
New York 7:30 a.m. ET: Apple is not letting press into the store. But I went in as a "shopper." It was filled with at least a hundred Apple employees in blue shirts, who were on hand to help customers buying and activating their new phones. Apple is not allowing any photography inside the Apple store.
New York 8:05 a.m. ET: The first Verizon iPhone customers started trickling out of the store about 20 minutes after the doors opened. I talked to Rominel Peguero of Manhattan. He was fourth in line and stood in line for about a half hour before the doors opened. He said he has never in stood in line for anything before. But he was afraid that Verizon and Apple would run out of phones, since they sold out during the pre-sale last week. He said he was going out of town tonight and wanted to make sure he got his new phone today.
San Francisco 6:40 a.m. PT: Well, here at the flagship Apple Store in San Francisco, you'd have to say it's not just cold weather that's keeping people from lining up to buy the Verizon iPhone. Upon arriving here about five minutes (before the 7 a.m. opening of the store), there were literally more Apple Store employees, police officers and reporters--each--than people in line to buy iPhones.
Indeed, there were only two people in line when I arrived.
Justin Roi, a 27-year-old San Francisco resident was first in line, and he got here just 50 minutes before the store's opening. In fact, he assumed he'd be in line for quite a while--he brought a chair to sit in while the line would presumably work its way slowly into the store.
This, of course, is quite a turn of events from the usual Apple product launch, where there are usually tons of people lined up to be among the first to buy whatever Steve Jobs and Co. have to offer.
In Roi's case, this is his first iPhone--AT&T or Verizon. "I was [waiting for Verizon]," Roi said. "I've had a lot of crappy phones from Verizon. Now I'll be moving up to iPhone."
But Roi also said he was surprised at the lack of people in line--thus his chair. Actually, he said, as he rounded the corner near the Apple Store and saw very few people waiting, he thought that all the iPhones were already sold out.
But, that's not the case. As in New York, the lines were short, but Apple can't blame frigid weather here.
On the other hand, we've heard that the Verizon store nearby has a bit longer line--so I'm going to head over there right now and see if there's more of a scene. If not, or even if there is but it's significantly smaller than the usual Apple product launch line, I think we'll be able to say that the hype surrounding the Verizon iPhone may, for perhaps the first time in recent Apple launch memory, have been just that--hype.
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