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Over 1 million units of the iPhone 3G S
have been sold since Friday's launch, Apple claims. The millionth
phone is said to have been sold by the end of Sunday, beating even
optimistic early forecasts closer to 700,000. The figure also
trumps the sales performance of the iPhone 3G, which sold a million
units on its opening weekend, but required 21 countries instead of
just eight.
Although underestimating sales figures by
250,000 to 500,000, Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster notes that
based on in-store traffic in New York City and Minneapolis, some 28
percent of people were switching to AT&T to pick up an iPhone
this year. If accurate, the number is a decline from 38 percent in
2008, and 52 percent in 2007. AT&T's ability to draw people
through the iPhone is shrinking, Munster comments.
Some 56 percent of those surveyed were
said to have been upgrading from an older iPhone however, a jump
from 38 percent last year, potentially indicating high brand
loyalty. 43 percent were buying a 32GB 3G S, as compared to the 66
percent who opted for the previous highest capacity (16GB) with the
3G, and 95 percent who chose 8GB over 4GB with the first iPhone.
16GB appears to be the ideal capacity for many people, Munster
suggests.
Also notable is that among the people
buying their first iPhone, 12 percent were switching from a
BlackBerry, up from 2008's 6 percent. Apple may be slowly gaining
ground with business users, amongst whom BlackBerries are standard.
Figures on Android, Palm, Symbian and Windows Mobile use have not
been published.
In a tangential note, Apple comments that
over 6 million people have downloaded the iPhone 3.0 firmware in
five days.
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