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I still have not bought an iPhone. I expect I will do so soon though now that there is at least one good SSH client available through the Apple App Store. But I will say that I've been put off by reports about the poor quality of AT&T's wireless network and, to some degree, by the apparent capriciousness of Apple's decision-making process regarding what applications can be made available through the App Store.
For me, these issues have delayed my purchase. But I expect that they have been a deal killer for quite a few people.
At first the lock-in deal with AT&T made sense to me. Apple's agreement with AT&T includes Apple receiving a share of the revenue the carrier gets from iPhone subscribers -- a nice deal indeed. But Apple does not have any such deal about iPods and seems to be doing just fine selling a much cheaper device. Now I'm not so sure that the iPhone lock-in is a good thing for Apple - it clearly is not a good thing for anyone else: Customers cannot chose the carrier that provides the best service, and AT&T's competitors cannot sell the iPhone.
It is true that because the iPhone is a GSM device it is not compatible with Verizon's or Sprint's networks, but just having a T-Mobile option could help some customers. What's more, having an option of swapping SIM cards with a local provider when traveling out of the country would be a very big win considering AT&T's unconscionable international roaming charges.
Apple could sell a lot more iPhones if they were not tied to specific carriers.
The value of the iPhone would also be higher if Apple did not block some of the applications it has from the App Store. Some filtering is needed to be sure that applications will not kill the iPhone or the phone network. But blocking applications that compete with Apple's own does no one good in the long run -- customers do not get alternatives and Apple has less of an incentive to produce better applications.
Speaking of unconscionable, that is just what a court has ruled that some of the terms of the AT&T iPhone user agreement may be. The same court has ruled that Apple and AT&T may have violated the Sherman Antitrust Act when they had a secret agreement that locked customers in for five years, three years past the two-year agreements that customers thought they were signing. The court ruled as well that Apple may have violated the same law by limiting the market for iPhone applications to those available through the App Store. In addition, the court ruled that Apple's decision to permanently disable unlocked iPhones with its Version 1.1.1 update may have also violated the law.
Comments (15)
blame appleBy Anonymous on October 9, 2008, 11:31 amApple shopped their phone around to T-Mobile, Sprint, and Verizon before offering it to AT&T as a last ditch. They didn't want to deal with a crap network any more...
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HippieBy Anonymous on October 9, 2008, 3:08 amStop being a hippie and buy an iPhone. You're obviously interested in one and I'm sure the problems you speak of won't impact you at all.
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AT&T Sucks.. I want T-Mobile and freedom to choose my AppsBy Anonymous on October 8, 2008, 2:55 pmWhy I haven't got an iPhone yet?: #1 - I hate AT&T Rates, Plans and Customer Service. #2 - I want to be able to choose what applications to install. Yes, I want...
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CompetitionBy Mike Moxcey on October 8, 2008, 11:47 amThe only thing that doesn't ring true is the idea of competition helping Apple make a better product. The writer apparently doesn't listen to Steve Jobs enough....
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Your title is totally unrelated to your article...By Anonymous on October 8, 2008, 10:52 amYour title is totally unrelated to your article. What an idiot! Who told you you could be a journalist.
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