Comments on: No iPhone 3G for me!
Glaskowsky encounters an obstacle in his quest to buy an iPhone 3G.
Glaskowsky encounters an obstacle in his quest to buy an iPhone 3G.
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Silicon Valley-based computer architect and chip analyst Peter N. Glaskowsky attends a variety of industry conferences throughout the year to meet with industry thought leaders and dig into the future of computing technology. In Speeds and Feeds, he analyzes trends in system architecture and interface design, as well as market and political pressures surrounding those trends. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
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For example, if you could modify and recompile all the code on your cellphone, relatively minor bugs could seriously impair the cellphone network. You could potentially monitor other people's calls or impersonate them on the network.
So don't expect that kind of freedom, and don't expect any open platform to match the iPhone user experience. That takes more central control and development effort than the open-source community is able to provide.
I'm a student, and work hard for the low pay I get, and honestly I rather wait until August then throw away my hard earned $100.00 for 'permission' from this ridiculous cell phone corporation to purchase a new phone which would only guarantee me as a customer for another 2 years.. I guess I should have done more research on the pricing of the phone and less on the actual functionality. But either way, I definitely feel lead on.. by the advertisements from apple and attnt. I really felt like attnt was 'banking' on my waiting for 3 hours in line, the hype, and the fact that I'm at point-of-purchase to force me into throwing away that $100.00 on them, for doing absolutely nothing but make this whole experience that much worse . I hope no one pays this fee, or exposes this as the scam it feels like it is. Thanks for your article, I found it very informative.
http://www.afhill.com/blog/2008/07/12/what-no-commitment-pricing-option-iphone/
They certainly can't afford to let people out of their contracts early just to get them signed up for another two years. If this logic could justify the full discount one year early, why not 18 months early, or 23 months early?
The early-upgrade fee is designed to cover exactly this situation, protecting the carrier's profitability while allowing customers to get the latest phones a little earlier. In my case, I figured the $60 early-termination fee was reasonable; Apple just didn't give me the chance to pay it. I gather there are a lot of people who believe it's reasonable to pay $200 extra for the iPhone 3G in order to bypass the issue of any current contract. That just wasn't for me.
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- by bdahern July 23, 2008 8:43 AM PDT
- Not sure what the problem is - my 2 year contract with ATT was not up until 10/23/08 and I had no problem upgrading to a 3G iPhone at the ATT store and I did not have to pay an early upgrade fee.
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- by Peter N. Glaskowsky July 25, 2008 1:07 AM PDT
- Very interesting... maybe your store just got the message. Lucky you. :-)
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