Update 2: Apple's U.S. Black Friday sale is up, and while not spectacular, there are some rare discounts to be found. To go back to the same examples we used for the U.K. and Australian Apple stores, the base model 13-inch MacBook Pro is $1,098, down from $1,199.
In fact, it looks like all MacBook Pro models are exactly $101 off, while the $999 white MacBook is not discounted at all. The 32GB iPod Touch is $268, down from $299.
This sale is good online and in Apple's retail stores and runs until 3 a.m. EST on November 28.
Update: Even though it's not quite Black Friday in the U.S. yet, it's past midnight in some other parts of the globe. Notably, Australia and the U.K. have both seen their respective Apple Web sites updated to reveal Apple's one-day sale. While we can't say yet that the deals in the U.S. will be exactly the same, there's no reason think they won't be.
On apple.com/uk, we saw a 13-inch MacBook Pro, originally £1,149, marked down to £1,078. On apple.com/au, the same unit was A$1,868, marked down from A$1,999.
Similarly, a 32GB iPod Touch is £208, marked down from £229 on the U.K. site, while while in Australia, it's A$358, down from A$399.
We've also examined some Black Friday deals from other retailers.
Our original post continues below:
According to purportedly leaked documents on the tech rumor site Boy Genius Report, Apple is gearing up to offer a series of post-Thanksgiving bargains on products from iPods to MacBooks.
The deal, allegedly good only on November 27, lists "up to" discounts of 30 percent on iPods (excluding the Shuffle and iPhone), 25 percent on Mac laptops and desktops, and 15 percent on accessories, software, and other hardware.
The Boy Genius Report Web site says: "One of our connects just hit us up with some intriguing Apple information. According to them, what you see detailed above is a shot of Apple's yearly Black Friday deals. It's reported to be something Apple will email out shortly."
Of course, with the vague use of "up to" and no specific products listed, we can't be sure if these will be good deals or not. But if you're interested in being the first in line to check them out, the leaked doc also says that select Apple stores will be opening at 6 a.m. on November 27.
(Credit:
Boy Genius Report)
Apple didn't cut prices as much as some had expected on Black Friday, but it didn't seem to matter to consumers.
(Credit: CNET)Few analysts were prepared to call Apple's Black Friday performance a blowout, but in general they thought consumers responded well to Apple's products and pricing last week.
Gene Munster of Piper Jaffray, Shaw Wu of Kaufman Brothers, and Maynard Um of UBS have weighed in with their thoughts on Apple's sales during the first official shopping day of the holiday season. Expectations had been muted going into the weekend, which many had thought would be dismal given the economic environment.
But the overall picture wasn't as bad as some had feared. And despite sticking with its historical Black Friday discount strategy rather than rolling out aggressive price cuts, Apple fared well, according to Munster. Checks at various Apple retail stores indicated that "Mac sales were better than expected" and iPhone sales were about in line with expectations, he wrote in a research note Monday.
Kaufman's Wu wrote, "Despite modest 5 percent-10 percent discounts by AAPL itself through its retail stores and website, our distributor and retail checks indicate strong foot traffic at AAPL stores and that iPods and Macs did fairly well, helped by bigger promotions by third-party retailers and unadvertised price matching by AAPL." There had been reports that Apple was planning to discount its products more steeply than in the past in response to concerns over the health of the economy, but the company stood pat.
UBS' Um also noted that Apple resellers, such as Best Buy and MacMall, were willing to discount prices more aggressively than Apple as well as apply discounts to products that Apple wouldn't touch in its own stores, such as the MacBook Pro and MacBook Air.
Apple retail stores will match the prices of products sold by other authorized retailers.
(Credit: Caroline McCarthy/CNET News)Apple has started reminding its store employees that they have the authority to match the prices of other Apple resellers.
IfoAppleStore reported earlier Tuesday that managers at Apple retail stores can honor the prices for Macs and iPods posted on other authorized outlets like Best Buy or Amazon.com. This has always been Apple's policy, according to AppleInsider, but it sounds like the company wanted to make it crystal clear ahead of a holiday season in which consumers are expected to be bargain hunters.
Apple posted some information on its Web site on Tuesday about the deals it will be offering through its online store this Friday, otherwise known as Black Friday. The company is believed to be planning "aggressive" discounts for the so-called biggest shopping day of the year.
Deep one-day discounts on products such as the new MacBook could be coming this Black Friday.
(Credit: CNET)Here's a rundown of some of the Apple news making the rounds this Wednesday:
Apple may launch most aggressive Black Friday pricing yet--AppleInsider: On a day when the stock market tanked once again on news of shifting priorities in the government's bailout plan, coupled with pessimistic forecasts from huge retailers like Best Buy, this notion doesn't seem all that far-fetched. Last year, Apple offered $101 discounts on MacBooks and other discounts on iPods on Black Friday, and Ben Reitzes of UBS thinks similar discounts could be applied more broadly across Apple's product line on that particular day.
Apple's iPhone faces off with the game champs--The Wall Street Journal: Is the "funnest iPod ever" something that should have Nintendo and Sony worried? Steve Jobs certainly thinks so, pointing out in this story (paid registration required) that a quarter of all the applications downloaded from the App Store have been games. The iPhone and iPod Touch may not yet be the choice of serious portable gamers, but Sega shared an interesting tidbit on how it views the iPhone: the 500,000 copies of Super Monkey Ball sold through the App Store would be considered a hit if it had sold that many copies of a game for the Nintendo DS or Sony PSP.
Apple focusing on MobileMe improvements in latest 10.5.6 builds--MacRumors: Everyone's favorite whipping-boy in the Apple universe--MobileMe--has received a great deal of work in the next update for Mac OS X Leopard, according to MacRumors. The update will supposedly have improvements to how MobileMe syncs data between MacBooks and the online service, which lets you access contacts, calendars, and other data from any computer.
The genius behind Steve--Fortune: This actually came out earlier in the week, but Adam Lashinsky's profile of Apple COO Tim Cook is worth a read if you haven't checked it out already. There's not a lot of new ground broken--Cook is the obvious short-term solution if Steve Jobs had to step down as Apple's leader, since he's a clear No. 2 and has already run the company once before--but the insights into Cook's personality and working style make it worth your time if you were ever curious about Apple's second-in-command.
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