With
new iPhones hitting the markets Today, Apple is seeking to regain momentum and
set new trends for the smartphone industry and tech sector.
The
newest versions of the California-based technology giant’s lifestyle-changing
iPhone aim to win over users with sophisticated camera technology, water
resistance, more power and other improvements.
But
Apple has raised eyebrows by eliminating headphone jacks in what executives
heralded as an embrace of a wireless future for its new iPhone 7 and 7 Plus.
The
devices with boosted memory capacity will be sold at roughly the same price as
the models they replace, starting at $649 for the iPhone 7 for US customers,
with deliveries in some 25 countries launching Friday.
What
remains unclear for Apple is whether it can generate the same kind of
excitement that surrounded previous versions of the iPhone, amid stiff
competition from Samsung and other rivals, and with many markets already
saturated.
While
at least one analyst has said buying smartphones will soon become as humdrum as
buying a microwave, Apple is aiming to boost interest in its other products and
services that make up its ecosystem, including an upgraded smartwatch, Apple
Pay and streaming music.
Apple
“provides users with an integrated, scalable, and seamless experience across
multiple devices, which we believe will be difficult for competitors to
replicate in scale,” RBC Capital Markets analyst Amit Daryanani said.
Apple’s
launch may benefit from the woes of key rival Samsung, which has been
struggling with a recall of some 2.5 million Galaxy Note 7 smartphones after
faulty batteries caused some handsets to explode during charging.
–
Supply, not demand –
Apple
has said it will not provide figures for launch weekend sales as it has in the
past. But there are indications of consumer interest.
US
telecom carriers Sprint and T-Mobile have announced that iPhone 7 pre-orders
were up significantly from what they saw for the prior version.
“It
is like four times bigger than the iPhone 6 for us at the pre-order stage,”
T-Mobile chief executive John Legere said in a live-broadcast at Periscope.
Analysts
expected sales of iPhone 7 models to be constrained by supply, not demand.
By
eliminating the traditional headphone jack, Apple is looking to push more
consumers to adopt wireless technology.
The
new phone will allow them to use Apple’s proprietary “lightning” connectors for
headphones but will also connect to new wireless “AirPods” designed for the
device.
The
3.5mm analog jack for wired headsets dates back more than a century, and it was
time for someone to “break from the past and start pushing people into the
future,” Creative Strategies analyst Tim Bajarin said.
Wireless future?
Apple
may be setting the stage for a dramatically different iPhone model to debut
next year on the 10th anniversary of the smartphone first introduced in 2007,
Bajarin said.
“It
could be a first step for Apple making this completely wireless, and maybe next
year a new iPhone with wireless charging,” he added.
Some
analysts see improvements in graphics quality and processing power as signs
Apple plans a radical new iPhone next year with a screen reaching rounded edges
and pressure-sensitive spots to replace physical buttons.
Apple
has made significant technology improvements in both hardware and its iOS
software, a new version of which also launched this week, experts say.
“Apple
wanted to make sure that the iPhone franchise was not going to fall behind the
Samsung Galaxy S franchise,” Mobilocity principal analyst J. Gerry Purdy said.
“While
the hardware seems to always get the headlines, it’s most often that the
software is where the real innovations occur that appear to more greatly affect
our overall productivity.”
While
Apple has touted total iPhone sales of one billion, the number sold in the
quarter ending June 25 fell 15 percent from a year earlier, highlighting
concerns over growth for the key profit driver.
Joining
the lineup in Friday’s launch will be the upgraded and water-resistant Apple
Watch Series 2, which the company hopes will reverse a slump in smartwatch
sales.
Apple
has been under pressure to restore its luster as an innovator and rev its
money-making machine with the kind of “next big thing” for which it was known
when the company’s late co-founder Steve Jobs was at the helm.
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