I do think a plastic iPhone will stick around. Perhaps a lot cheaper than Apple originally expected.
Apple of course plays catchup all the time john but their products work well. My friend refuses to get an iPhone but yet every android phone she's had has given her problems.
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I have to wonder what they were thinking with the 5c. It was cheaper but not nearly cheap enough for the markets they were said to be aiming for.
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Well it's the old iPhone 4 GSM that's going back into production for emerging markets, not the 5C.
Think that tells the whole story right there.
Interesting approach. "Here's a 4ish year old phone (5s/5/4s/4) so that we can make as much profit on the transaction as possible." I personally think it's a mistake, as just because these potential customers are in an emerging market doesn't mean they aren't aware of what's going on. It will be for those that "have to have an iPhone" and likely continue the drubbing they are receiving from Android in these markets. Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF700T using Tapatalk
The emerging markets are where any prospect of growth is going to come from. It's not going to be grown in the established markets. They have already reached saturation with smartphones.
Or as others have put it, it's about the next billion people and then the next billion people.
A bigger screen wouldn't be bad as long as it maintains color accuracy and doesn't drain battery. That said, I don't think I'd want a phone much bigger than the S4's form factor.Define catchup? Screen size of course. Other features? Jury is out. Galaxy S5 with a fingerprint scanner. Where did Samsung get that idea ? Me personally, I don't want a phone larger than 4".
Perhaps Apple can somehow cut the bezel down on the screen to allow a bigger screen without increasing the width of the phone as much.
Not this time around, but it should drop a couple hundred bucks once the iPhone6 comes out if Apple holds to pattern (i.e. be the free phone).
I apologize for the slow reply, I had a really really busy week last week.
That's great, but we're talking about the next billion in places were there ain't no such thing as a free phone. Why? Because the carriers don't subsidize phones there. In case you hadn't noticed, T-Mobile started the ball rolling and others are following suit with subsidies starting to be phased out. I expect in few years the US won't have subsidized phones any longer.
When that's the case, and people have to actually start paying full price for their phones rather than Apple will need to have a better pricing strategy. Perhaps going more direct sales, ala the Motorola X line / Nexus line will be the approach to maintain their margins.