Thursday, September 5, 2013

News Upadates For iPhone Technology

Apple have begun sending out invitation launch to the latest iPhone.The invitations show an Apple logo imposed over a series of different colored circles with the strap line “This should brighten everyone’s day.”
Most analysts predict that Apple will be launching two new smartphones at the event: an updated high-end model either named the iPhone 5S or iPhone6, and a cheaper, plastic-cased handset called the iPhone 5C.
The lower-cost iPhone 5C is expected to appeal to developing markets and first-time smartphone users. Around half of global mobile owners still use so called ‘dumb’ or feature phones, and as the market for high-end devices reaches saturation, analyst suggest that Apple needs to broaden its appeal.
This Year :
Next week Apple expected to release not only an update to last year's iPhone 5, but also a cheaper model called the iPhone 5c.

In the past, Apple has continued selling older iPhone at lower prices alongside new flagship models. Right now, 2013's iPhone 4S and 2012's iPhone 4 are still on sale alongside the latest edition, the iPhone 5.

But selling a phone that's both new and bargain-priced would be a huge turnaround in Apple's traditional practice of focusing on premium products that carry fat profit margins.


Apple's new iPhone trade-in program has the potential to radically amp up Apple's control of its iPhone customer base and even has the potential to change how i Phones are sold. On the surface, it's just a play for customer convenience, a move to get a customer to walk back into a retail store and buy something. Fair enough. Definitely smart.
 Apple's retail operations can be counted among Steve Jobs' "babies"; the stores' slick design and sales techniques are legendary in the industry for their per-square-footage sales. In 2012, Apple retail store sales outpaced Tiffani's by 40 percent. Apple is in no danger of following in the footsteps of, say, J.C. Penney or Sears, but its retail operations have shown some worrisome signs of decay.
 Movie star Jackie Chan, the Chinese kung fu aficionado who has appeared in more than 150 films, is taking loads of flak for posts on Chinese social media. Chan first riled Chinese citizens when he posted a photo of a picturesque Beijing skyline with the caption, "I took the picture myself. Who says Beijing doesn't have blue sky? Look how blue the sky is and how green the land is."
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