Sunday, September 30, 2007

Ipod Touch - India

I had a chat with an Apple store employee (Apple Store at Gold Adlabs, Pune), the Ipod touch will be available in India on 15th October.
The 8Gb 'Touch' will cost ~Rs: 17,000(Should cost cheaper in the Grey market).The 'Touch' is the closest we can expect to get to the iPhone.
Oh well, if we cant have an iPhone, at least , we'll have a lookalike.iPod touch

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Reuters: Deutsche Telekom wins iPhone deal

Reuters has announced that Deutsche Telekom has won the contract to sell the iPhone in Germany. Deutche Telekom owns T-mobile and will share voice and data revenues generated by the Phone.

According to Reuters:

Apple is expected to hand a UK sale deal to Spanish Telefonica's O2 UK unit, and a French deal to France Telecom's Orange, analysts say, though the companies have maintained strict silence about any deal.
Apple needs to get it's European Partners right, just before Christmas hits.

Friday, September 7, 2007

Apple Stock takes a Beating after Price cut

Apple lost Billions from it's market cap after a price cut on the Apple iPhone.

Apple stock received a thrashing from Wall Street over the last three days, as investors showed their displeasure with the company's missteps in iPhone pricing by shaving billions of dollars off the company's market cap.

The sell off started Wednesday when Apple chief executive Steve Jobs surprised customers and shareholders with a $200 price cut on the iPhone, which had only been available for two months. Apple typically doesn't reduce prices on products until they're trumped by upgrades.

Unhappy with the impact the cut would have on Apple's bottom line, investors on Wednesday dumped the company's stock, driving its price down 6.1% to $136.76 per share. On Thursday, the sell off started anew when Jobs said the company would offer iPhone buyers who paid the original $599 for the gadget a $100 credit on any Apple product bought through its Web site or retail stores. The credit, triggered by angry protests from early iPhone buyers, led to Apple stock finishing the day down 55 cents to $135.01.

While there were no new announcements on Friday, the stock continued to fall, dropping another 2.4%, or $3.24, to end the day at $131.77 per share. Since Wednesday, when the stock opened at $144.97, the price has fallen $13.20, shaving $11 billion off Apple's market cap, according to analysts with investment firm Barron's.

The iPhone price cut was seen by some experts as an indication that the gadget was priced too high for the market, and Apple had no choice but to lower the cost to broaden the customer base.

Jobs on Thursday acknowledged that the company hoped to make the gadget more affordable. "It benefits both Apple and every iPhone user to get as many new customers as possible in the iPhone tent," Jobs said in an open letter to iPhone customers posted on the company's Web site.

Some experts have also said that Apple wants to be sure to hit Job's goal of shipping 10 million iPhones by June 2008, which will mark the device's one-year anniversary.
Source