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iPhone: Apple’s (APPL) First Flop

Apple (AAPL) begins selling it’s revolutionary iPhone this summer and it will mark the end of the string of hits for the company. Billed as “your life in your pocket”, it will sell for $599 with a one year or $499 with a two agreement through AT&T wireless. The company has had a string of hits since it introduced the iPod and it’s shareholders have benefited sending shares from $7 in 2003 to the $100 they sit at today. The introduction of the iPhone will be the first miscue for the company and send it’s shares, priced for perfection tumbling. “Why”? you ask.

More Isn’t Always Better:
The beauty of the iPod was and is its simplicity and singular purpose. It enabled even the most tech phobic of us the ability to operate and enjoy it. Because of this sales have been phenomenal. There are several versions of mp3 player phones out there and none of them are big sellers. The reason? The market does not want them together. I do not want to have to turn of my music to get a phone call. If I am driving my family in my car and we are listening to the iPod, having to turn off the music to answer my phone becomes a major hassle. The same holds true for any event that I use the ipod to play music at. Having both in one creates problems, it does not solve them. Why would I pay $600 for this, or, buy an iPod in addition to this in order to avoid the hassle?

One Carrier:
All of have cell phone agreements and have a cancellation fee. This varies from $100 to $150 dollars. This price need to be added to the costs of the iPhone for those who want it right away or will cause a lag in initial sales. This lag will allow cell competitors to create their own, cheaper versions to compete, hurting future sales.

Touch Screen
Being able to make a call simply by pointing a finger at a number is an feature touted for the phone. How is this any different or accurate than scrolling on my blackberry? This feature will lead to frustration as users who do not point exactly at the number they want will keep initializing errant calls.

“All In One” Historical Issues:
How many people have had TV/VCR or DVD combos or the dreaded all in one fax, scanner, copier? Now, how many regret that decision? When you have an all in one you then become a slave to that device. If either breaks, the both units must be replaced. If a newer, better version or either comes out, you cannot purchase it because it then entails buying both again at considerable cost. Now, when you consider the unimpressive reliability history of the iPod and the cost to attempt to repair them (usually it is cheaper to just buy a new one), it is not an unrealistic stretch to consider that you may be purchasing one of these every 2 or 3 years. An expensive proposition.

What Should Apple Do?
This is the easiest part. There is no reason to have an 8GB iPod on the phone. Give us a 2GB capacity so we can put our favorite stuff on it and listen when we want and cut the price to $299 and you may have something. A $599 phone will not gain mass acceptance no matter what it does, especially when people can still get it’s functionality from their existing devices. Also, the exclusive deal with AT&T was not a very bright idea. Until it is expanded to all carriers, you will have nothing more than a little niche product.

The real winner in all this? AT&T, not Apple or its shareholders.

39 replies on “iPhone: Apple’s (APPL) First Flop”

While I agree that the iPhone is no sure thing, I doubt that it will be a flop. Also, I think you are not taking into account the fact that this is a “1.0” iPhone, designed to hook the early adopters and drive huge margins. You can bet your bricks Apple is developing lower cost, lower feature models just like the iPod nano or shuffle.

Also, Apple’s growth story is also linked to Mac market share growth and continuing iPod sales growth. The iPhone is a big bet, but not the only driver of growth here.

I’ll tell you what, your article is no different than the opinionated articles I have read over the past few years. The likes of Richard Suttmier, Doug Kass, Citigroup analysts, San Francisco Chronicle reporters, and many more, have continuously expressed opinions about Apple and not in a positive way.

The iPod was denounced continuously, as iTunes have as well as the entire Apple product line. I’ve heard its a fluke, one time thing over and over for years.

As Steve above has said “iPhone is no sure thing, I doubt that it will be a flop”. The only thing here that has higher likelyhood of flopping is your opinion.

But perhaps there is a different agenda here, perhaps you are short and taking quite a beating?

In any case Apple shares cannot go up in a straight line and they will pullback, but not because the iPhone will be a flop.

Good luck to you.

I look forward to checking your blog a year from now and read about how you got it all wrong about the iPhone.
-steve jobs

thank you for reading and commenting

i have no position in apple

i think the iphone at $599 will be a flop, i believe I said a 2GB version for $299 or less would sell??

I also believe I said that the ATT decision pinholed the spectrum of potential buyers was a mistake

the ipod broke new ground, the iphone does not.. big difference.

would you buy one?

you will not have to check back, i do regular updates of all the opinions i have, it will be out there…

if you are a shareholder, i hope i am wrong, i just really do not think so

don’t forget, you need 10 million people to feel that way….

if you own shares, do not fret. in the big picture, it won’t kill the stock. it will hit it pretty good, but once they get the price down and offer it to more people, it will sell

10 million is easy. the US only can do 10 million. lets not even bother to count Europe.

no frets here. no frets for last 3years. stock should see a nice run to 170 by years end.

The introductory offer to early adopters is a key consideration here. I believe the Razr was something like $700 in this same phase. There is enough buzz about the iPhone to carry it through the high price tag early adopter phase and into the more lucrative volume phase. While I don’t think that the phone is functionally better than some of the Blackberry or Motorola offerings, that really doesn’t matter. The iPod isn’t functionally better than many MP3 players. I think it’s fairly easy to see this game goes far beyond functionality.

One question for you…have you even used/held/viewed up close an actual functioning final product of the iPhone? No? Thought so.

Until the iPhone even hits the street everyone with a website and an opinion just has to be the authority about how Apple will crash and burn with this product.

Your opinions, and not working knowledge of the iPhone, are flawed as I see it.

Your “one carrier” argument is a sorry one since this is a business and if you want the product that bad to cancel your contract to get this phone, you’ll do it. That’s a plus for the partnership behind this product.

The touch screen, as long as it is as accurate as it seems in the demos, will be better than the Blackberry interface since it changes for each application shown on it. Again, a poor excuse for an argument.

Your historical take on combining devices is just laughable.

2GB of storage only? Sorry, but photos and music might work there, but movies, etc. are going to be where the iPhone will shine.

You speak of AT&T coming out the winner in this…I think you’re wrong. Apple will make sure their margins are secure for the initial release of the iPhone. If AT&T blows this opportunity by forcing users into overpriced plans to use the iPhone, it will be AT&T that suffers, not Apple. The phone will eventually make it to other carriers and if AT&T shows that they can fumble at the 1-yard line, the other carriers will pick up the ball and score.

You asked “why would I pay $600 for this?” Simple…the same reason that people paid that much for a new iPod about seven years ago…the same reason that people bought the first Blackberrys when they came out around that price.

Wouldn’t it be a better world when I could invest in a company without some person (analyst) that comes along with unsubstantiated rumor and opinion to rock the boat? Next time know what you’re talking about before you hit the keyboard, m’kay?

One little addendum: a single service provider agreement is standard. When the Razr first came out (or many other phones), it was only available through Cingular I believe. There is that weird new MP3 phone only available through Sprint. It is commonplace. Often, the single service provider wall breaks down after awhile (again, see Razr).

Disclosure: No position in Apple.

bellboy,
thank you for reading..

this is a “blog”: by definition it contains opinions. mine AND yours i might add

the ipod mass acceptance did not happen until cheaper versions came out. just like the motorola “razor”. people will pay $600 en mass for a phone.

steve,

i agree on the razor. but let’s remember, the razor was not a big hit until the price fell to around $200.
it only sold a small amount before then

If iPhone flopped, it wouldn’t be Apple’s first. So even the title of the article is way off. You tried to tone down a bit with your responses in the comments section, but I think it’s clear to me you just wanted to generate traffic to your blog =) When was iPhone introduced? Oh, it was some four months ago. So it took you that long to realize that iPhone would be a flop? Dude …

Anon,

-nothing i have said in the comments contradicts anything i said in the article

-it would be the first flop this century 🙂

-I do not understand your last comment on my timing….. it is not even for sale yet..

I’m so confident you’re wrong on this one, I’d love to get a little side-bet going –

In lieu of that, I’d appreciate it if you would keep publishing this opinion so perhaps Apple stock will drop a bit and I can pick up some more.

how about this?

give me 500 to 1000 words why it will be a hit..

NOT why i am wrong, but why it will be a hit. it is easy to criticize others, give me an original opinion

if it is good, i will run it and credit you “as a reader” or a name if you want to be anything other than “anon”

“the ipod mass acceptance did not happen until cheaper versions came out. just like the motorola “razor”. people will pay $600 en mass for a phone.”

Cheaper versions of iPod drove sales up is what you’re saying? Uh uh. Sales didn’t start rising substantially until Windows compatibility was added to the mix–since it was Mac-only when it launched. Also keep in mind that the price didn’t change much until the iPod mini came out which really blew the doors off. But enough about iPod history…

People are not just buying a phone, but a lot more. The rumors have been there for a long time and Apple listened–unlike the competition. If this product is what Apple has been advertising, this product will blow the competition away and the Zune will be tossed onto the pile of other POS tech gear that didn’t have their sheet together.

An overly simplistic and flawed analysis with a bomb-thrower headline. Feeling lonely?

Why will it succeed? OK… I’m not absolutely positive but I’m pretty confident it will.

To me… as a consumer… it will succeed because it brings together my MP3 player and my phone AND it adds wi-fi. OK: many phones already do this today. Yes but they don’t use iTunes – the real reason why people buy iPods. I’ve tried the other competitive devices and their software is at best difficult to use.

All of those iPod users out there who would like to carry only one device will now have that opportunity.

So the thing will scavenge sales from the iPod – certainly. But the existing iPods it will replace will be sold or gifted to others – more iTunes users… Throw in the real-time email (something I am not terribly fond of and could easily do without – I don’t need that much connectivity) and you’ve got a chance at some conquest sales from blackberry users.

It’s a little pricey and I’m disappointed in the AT&T/Cingular deal but that might be a small price to pay for the convenience of the single device.

Disclosure – I do own Apple stock. And, it seems I’ve been seduced into the Apple cult by top quality product – at least from outward appearance – iMac G5, MacBook Pro, video iPod… scary… I wouldn’t call myself a cult member…

And Apple shares are rising because of the PC market share gains (and iPhone speculation). You’ll see the real hit from the iPhone with the first quarterly report after the introduction (hopefully in the positive direction).

Joseph,

thank you for reading

simple analysis? more of an opinion, hard to really “analyze” something you cannot get your hands on yet.

Lonely? Nope

Correct? Yup

That is the great thing about this stuff, in a few months we will be able to tell..

FYI Todd–

When Jobs introduced the Iphone, he clearly mentioned that the music automatically diminishes when a call is answered or placed–

so that ain’t a problem bub!

Thanks for you thoughts on the Apple I-Phone. Your friends that shorted the stock will also thank you. I myself took this downward spike in the stock price to pick up more… Sorry, but the 1 million buyers and I think that you will be wrong…. Time will tell….

sure it is a problem, it makes the ipod portion of it useless in any situation where a group is listening. are you going to use you iphone at a party when if anyone calls you the music stops?

again, i have no psition in apple..

1 million units sold? that qualifies it as a flop..

10 million units is only 3% market share according to jobs

blakcberry has 20% of the pda market share. what made the big difference for them? you can get a blackbery for $99 now…

$600 phones will not sell

“First flop”? Does the word “Newton” ring a bell? Or “Mac cube”? You must admit that your headline is needlessly inflammatory.

Argument 1: “More isn’t always better”.

Reply 1: Yes, and it isn’t always worse. And sometimes it really is better. I (and many others) look at the web browser component of iPhone as the real breakthrough here. We’re talking a portable Internet device that lets you look at “real” web pages, not some micro-version of them. You’re out at a bar and want to settle a sports argument – whip out your iPhone and bam, free drinks for the winner. You’re having a day on the town and decide you want to catch a movie, or make dinner reservations – wham, that info is at your fingertips. And in exactly the same way you are used to using your web browser at home.

Now you might argue that you have these capabilities on a Blackberry or something. Not quite true. Ever use a browser on one of those? And ask someone who doesn’t have a Blackberry why they don’t – just looking at the pile of buttons on the front of something like that is intimidating. So here, less is more…more inviting, less intimidating. The iPhone interface looks a lot like widgets on the Mac OS X, and it doesn’t jumble them all over the place with arcane menu trees.

Argument 2. One Carrier

Reply 2: This can not “cause a lag in initial sales” as the intial sales are zero. So we are starting with the 50 or 60 million ATT customers and adding in folks who don’t already have a cell phone as the initial base.

Further, by announcing the iPhone so early, Jobs has been exceptionally clever in giving folks a heads-up not to renew their contracts. I know I haven’t done so – not because I will buy an iPhone but because I *might* buy one. If you want your argument to hold water, show us some stats on how many people are under contract and the time they have remaining on their contracts…and then compare that to the subset who consider themselves “possibly interested” in the iPhone.

Argument 3: Touch Screen

Reply 3: Can you pinch photos and web pages larger and smaller on your screen? No. And your “simplicity” and “enjoy” comments on the iPod in Argument 1 come back to haunt you here – it’s a way cooler experience than scolling on a Blackberry. The errant calls argument seems utterly weak and best and doesn’t merit a reply.

Argument 4: “All in One” Historical Issues.

Reply 4. This is a rehash of argument 1. And the logic is flawed. Yes, a DVD in a DVD/VCR combo can break…are you suggesting that the iPhone might stop playing songs, but still make calls? Or that the browser might fail, but the songs will still play?

As far as the life expectancy of the iPhone w.r.t. the iPod. First, at that price, people will take better care of them. Second, the size is larger so it’s less likely to go through the wash. Third, the resale market on iPods is quite healthy, and would be so for iPhones. And have you ever heard of something called eBay?

Argument 5: What Should Apple Do?

Reply 5: A “lower cost” iPhone will no doubt come out eventually. But only after market research into user habits has determined what features folks consider worth paying a premium for.

As far as being “nothing more than a little niche product” by teaming with ATT goes….we;;, Mac users have heard that for years…and who’s laughing now?

Wow, can’t wait to see you backpedal on this one. No reason for 8GB? I’ll have mine filled with music, photos, and video from day one. They should release a 16GB model at $800. It would sell.

By the way, 10 million units is actually only 1% of the billion-unit market and nobody listens to their iPod while at a party. Just FYI.

Todd,

Your analysis falls short in several ways. As someone who has been following Apple extensively for the past 8 years, and who invested in Apple in April 2007 when the stock price was $13.5 (split adjusted to $6.75 in today’s values), let me offer the following (slightly long) analysis.

To begin with, you incorrectly state the price structure of the iPhone. You wrote, “it will sell for $599 with a one year or $499 with a two agreement through AT&T wireless.” Based on Apple and AT&T’s published materials, as well as the majority of 3rd party analysis, the iPhone will sell for $499 for a 4GB model and $599 for an 8GB model, independent of the plan one purchases.

Leaving aside this basic point, your analysis is based on the flawed premise that the market does not want an iPod an a phone together. As evidence, you offer the assertion that it is an intollerable inconvenience to have one’s music turned off when accepting a phone call, especially when using the iPhone in a car or event setting. What evidence do you have that the iPhone is actually compatible with a car-based system? If it is, why is it a deal-breaker for one’s purchase to have the iPhone operate both as a phone and an iPod in one’s car? One would think that having a single device that could be plugged into a car and operate over the speaker system as both an iPod and a hands-free phone would be a major selling point, given the recent legislative push to ban hand-held cell phones in cars.

The analysis you offer of the iPhone’s drawbacks in the car, as well as your dismissal of the wisdom of 8GB of storage, betrays your misunderstand of the market that Apple is trying to target. This product is not targeted to the 55-year-old professional who is content to performing simple computing tasks, and perhaps owns and is capable of using an iPod. This product is targeted to the large market of 18 to 35/40-year-olds who see both the value and convenience of having a single device for phone calls and music (not to mention the smart phone capabilities). For this group, the cell phone and the iPod are necessary personal items that are carried with them most of the time. Merging these devices is a natural progression in the move towards developing more portable and convenient devices.

Given the portability and convience issues, your arguments regarding TV/VCR/DVD combos are void, as there is usually no convience associated with buying a combo TV/DVD machine other than the expected ease of use. Space and portability is not an issue. A more appropriate comparison would be the merger of the cell phone and the PDA, resulting in the smart phone. Cell phone and PDAs with internet capability had existed as separate entities for years, and were successful as such. Smart phones, which represent the fusion of these two devices, are convenient and very popular.

The other arguments you make, specifically regarding the touch screen and the rational for having 8GB of memory, are not exclusive to the iPhone and thus are not factors which will drive down sales. There is just as much chance of pushing a wrong button on one’s blackberry as there is of pushing a wrong number on one’s iPhone, given the blackberry’s advantage of tactile feel and the iPhone’s advantage of larger numbers. 8GB might not be necessary, but for those of us who will use the iPhone as a full-time iPod, the space is much appreciated. Similar arguments against 8GB could be made with regards to the iPod Nano. Lets not forget, however, that anyone who feels that 8GB is too much can save $100 by buying the 4GB iPhone.

The only relevant and significant issue you raise is in regards to the exclusivity with AT&T. Whether or not this is an issue remains to be seen. Will customers go through the hassle of switching phone carriers just to purchase the iPhone? The answer, in my judgement, is maybe. What the iPhone will hopefully offer is the convenience of having to carry only one device, ease of use of both the phone and iPod functions, extensive integration with address book and calendar functions, and the first-class service that comes with every Apple product (as rated by several customer service surveys). For some, these benefits will justify switching to AT&T, but for many, they will not. For short term growth, Apple is wise to partner with AT&T in order to gain easy entry into the field. In the long term, Apple must move away from its exclusivity agreement with AT&T in order to gain a significant portion of the market share.

I hope you find this analysis useful.

Regards,

Jonathan

One of the main points missed in Todd’s iPhone predictions is the fact that it is not just a phone and iPod. I’ve been a Mac user since 1984 and don’t even own an iPod. I can’t wait to get my hands on an iPhone. The impressive part to me is being able to have a Mac in my pocket. The fact that I have a phone, camera, and iPod is a plus.

The iPhone as a portable computer was not discussed. The latest Wi-fi capability, Bluetooth, a custom version of OSX all in a pocket computer will eliminate my having to carry a loptop when away from my desk. It will have a Safari web browser, my Mail, Widgets, and Address Book, all which can easily be interfaced with my desk computer. This is something way beyond any Blackberry or competitor has done. It’s not just a device than CAN do some computer things, it does them with style and functionality similar to my Mac. This is the aspect that excites me and I assume most Mac users.

Maybe I’ll enjoy many of the additional things I can with an iPod, there are many times I need a camera, but I have to have a phone and internet access and I don’t like carrying all that junk around. Apple is not just another company and this will not be just another phone.

Todd Sullivan, I appreciate your opinion about apple. This artical makes for great ratings. But apple will thrive even more on the iphone, especially in the cellular business. You need to remember the millions who make their cell phone as the biggest liability. My opinion: there is more fish than you think.

Wow. What predictions. I am glad you didn’t tell Orville and Wilbur to stop. I am glad you weren’t giving advice to Henry Ford. It does seem that you issued the flight plan to Emilia Erhardt.

You speak of the stock. I have owned it from 29 pre-split and my comments as to why APPLE is a hit, not only with their Ipods but MACS are all over the Yahoo newsgroups.

Just aas hundreds if not thousands were standing in line for PS3’s so are they standing in line right NOW for Iphones at 800 dollars plus.

Predictions: The Iphone will outsell any phone on the market on it’s opening day/ Apple we be backlogged with orders. (Not always a good thing) I can’t wait for one. I also will pay 425 dollars to play Pebble Beach Golf. And that only lasts 4 hours and I have no phone after. Do you think 500 is alot of money to the rich and famous or the other bazillion people who love gadgets?

WOW. What a prediction. Cept I have been listening to this BS all the while I have been making oodles watching Steven Jobs wave his wand.

Stand aside. I’ll nuy the one you let past.

Your Blackberry will go the way of DELL. Shortly with their poor service, they will be something like Gateway.. Gateway who?

How do they allow you the air time. You assumptions are based on …actually NOT MUCH at all, just poor opinion. Maybe you need blog readers.

Good Luck. Apple will soon announce a split, I will buy a few more shares and watch it run to 100 AGAIN.

Hey tard, First the iphone turns off when a phone call comes in.

Second, your computer is an all in one device. Its called software that changes when something new comes up. A VCR/DVD cant be changed retard, but software can.

Quit writing ariticles if you don’t get the facts straight! Someone, is judging a product before it even comes out. Did you watch the podcast! Get a life.

Seriously, you should be banned from the internet for being so gay.

f-off dork face.

You appear to be in the same group of folks who just can’t conceive what the iPhone will bring to the “game.” Being an Apple device it will be well integrated to the more than adequate Apple computers. With its small form and compatible system it will usher in a new era of folks who want to be on the “go” and still handle their daily business without having to schlep their computer with them because the iPhone will allow them the access to their machine’s info. It is a new paradigm for the info worker wanting out of his or her cage.

When Jobs looked at the iPhone model he instantly knew most of the work had already been completed with a well tested interface and software already created. The argument concerning the iPhone being a crappy iPod cause you can’t listen to music and talk . . . so what. You seem to think folks aren’t going to pony up 600 bucks for a device that will readily benefit them.

I wouldn’t bet on your argument whereas I seriously bet on Apple in 2000 when the world was wondering if they were going to survive. They have and quite well, making many of us stock holders more than a little happy!

Todd,
If nothing else, at least the overwhelming # of pro-iPhone responses received (i.e: potential iPhone buyers) thus far should make you want to reevaluate your opinion on the iPhone.

Let me chime in and agree this article is bait. Gee it is working too.

I’m not buying one, but enough will to make this product a success. 1 Million is a good start- market share isn’t the primary concern and the phone will add to the bottom line. If 1.0 isn’t right then 2.0 will be. They are already talking about 3g versions.

Also, you assume the stock price is predicated on iPhone success. While some are in for that trade, the major story is still iPod, iTunes, Macs, and the ecosystem now includes Apple tv and soon iPhone.

Unlike Moto, they really don’t need to dominate the market to have great success. Look at the computer market share, I guess they are a flop there?

Wow,

I think there are a few emotions running wild. Todd basically said he would not buy one for $599…thats it. I would not buy one either at that price (or Apple stock at almost 35 times earnings), and I don’t think most logical people would. Price it in the $200’s as the same as the other available devices and it might make a go.

But, as I can see from these emotions gone wild, there might be a few early birds who pay a premium.

Thanks Todd!

finally !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

somebody who actually read it…

thank you

maddog

Question: What is your portfolio gain in the last year?

It’s not very good, is it? I say this because you obviously didn’t do your research before writing this article. And also, I am no Appleholic.

You are wrong on many points.

1. The iPhone has 2 models for 499 and 599.

2. Apple is aiming for 10 million phones, which is a tiny 1% of the market.

3. The iPhone automatically shuts the music off when you receive a phone call.

Now, let me tell about some features that may or may not sway your opinion.

1. Did you know that the iPhone is going to be the world’s smallest fully functional computer? I hope you read this and answer me back.

Again, this phone is the only phone on the market with a full fledged operating system. Name me one cell phone where you can comfortably read your blog in its entirety. Can you?

No.

2. iPhone will double as a GPS unit. Buy one from Garmin and you will pay 200 to 500 dollars.

3. You say 8 GB is too much? This shows that you are not in touch with what’s going on. This is the only phone out there that you can watch movies on.

4. No other phone has enough space on it to watch a movie. No other phone has a screen big enough to watch a movie on to make it worthwhile.

5. The new Blackberry doesn’t even have 1 GB of memory – and the iPhone has 4 or 8 GB! Do you realize how important this is?

6. Since it’s a fully-functional computer, the iPhone will have iChat. Do you know what this product it? This means that, on the iPhone, you can conduct a live TELECONFERENCE on your phone with huge, real-time pictures of who you’re talking to. Can any other phone do this???

7. iPhone is THE status symbol for the 13 – 21 year old crowd. This is the crowd that buys $120 jeans and was, as of last year, buying the new pink Razr for $300. Myspace is abuzz with iPhone chatter amongst the teens there. I hate to say it, but if you are investing in any stock that appeals to young people, you have to know what’s going on at YouTube, Myspace, Facebook etc. Somehow, I doubt you have ever visited these sites.

8. 10 million phones sold in a year and a half is a tiny amount. Basically Apple will be looking to get 1 in 10 U.S. AT&T customers. Easily achievable.

9. Where I live, the local Cingular store had hundreds of people on a waiting list who had committed to buying an iPhone. This waiting list was just terminated.

10. Have you ever seen people lined up around the block for a cell phone? No. iPhone will be the first time this has happened. Kids around the world are already planning their lines, strategies, bathroom breaks, hot locations, etc. How do I know this? I visit Myspace and Facebook and Google and my local Apple and Cingular stores. Do you???

11. Google iFlirt. It will blow your mind. Imagine going to mall and asking your iPhone to find all eligible females in a one mile radius. After it does so and displays their dating profiles, you can “wink” at these girls and send them your profile. Wanna go get some coffee? Meet me by the movie theater? Teens are already talking about this. This is MySpace on the go, for young people. Can your phone do this?

No.

Also, the iPhone will have the most and biggest, clearest video games available for it. Don’t underestimate this. They’ve got a beautiful Texas Holdem game in the works for the iPhone.

12. Visit Apple.com and look up their widgets. User-created widgets do anything and everything from the stupid to the necessary and there are thousands of these tools. They will all be available on the iPhone.

13. VoIP. If you are an investor, I assume you know what this is. If you run Skype on this, and since Apple is the only true Wi-Fi phone, you can make calls through the internet and bypass the cell provider from a hot spot. Think of all the college campuses that are Wi-Fi already. This alone is a game changer and this is exactly why Google is working on massive WiFi and WiMax hotspots around the country. Eventually, the whole country will be Wi-Fi and Apple will bypass all cell providers and become the non-cell phone cellphone. This is why their AT&T contract is so brief.

You do not even see how big this game is where it’s going to unfold at. If you call yourself a serious investor, you should. Take a look at the phone again, and make yourself some money on this thing.

Can you really afford to be bearish on Apple again? Just last summer they were $50. Now they’re near $110. You say iPhone won’t work, and you didn’t even scratch the surface on what this device can do. You do yourself and your readers a disservice by not doing the proper amount of research.

Read this and answer back. 🙂 Good luck.

Kenneth

Kenneth,

thank you for the comment. i am aware of what the phone does. one or two more functions and it could make dinner for me…

looking at it a different way. it is not ipod since any call shuts off the music, it is not a computer because lets face it, a 3.5 inch screen is too small for anything more than periodic use..

basically it is a really fancy blackberry at 5 times the cost sold only through one carrier????

I can see what it does, i just do not think there will be a big market for it at $500 or $600

like i think i have said at least two dozen times now, at $299 you will have something. at it’s current price, only the hard core folks will want one and if anyone tell me Jobs will call that a success, please….

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