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iPhone Users Angry Over AT&T Upgrade Policy

All is not sweetness and light in the wake of the Apple WWDC kickoff announcements, especially concerning the evolution of the iPhone. Reader Hugh Pickens writes: "AT&T will offer the new iPhone 3G S when it debuts later this month at a cost of $199 and $299 for the 16GB and 32GB models, but only to new customers and those who qualify for the discounted price. AT&T subscribers with an iPhone 3G who are not eligible for an upgrade — those not near the end of their two-year contracts — will have to pay $200 more — $399 for the 16GB model and $499 for the 32GB model. 'This is ridiculous and slap in the face to long-time loyal iPhone customers like me who switched from T-Mobile and the only reason was the iPhone,' writes one unhappy iPhone customer. 'We have to mount a vigorous campaign to change this policy. Call your local AT&T and ask for the manager and complain. Send e-mails and post in forums everywhere.' The issue is spurring heavy debate on support discussion forums, with some customers supporting AT&T. 'The option you have is to honor the contract you freely committed yourself to,' says one forum member. 'If you want to upgrade early then you will have to pay full price with no subsidy discount. You can't blame anyone but yourself for your predicament.'"

789 comments

  1. BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know Apple releases a new phone every year, and you know AT&T makes you sign a 2-year contract. Either pay the higher price for the upgrade or live through the horror of not having the latest shiny product until your contract runs out.

    1. Re:BooHoo by puck01 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I have to agree. I'm not a cell phone guru by any measure, but only offering the discount rate every two years seems to be a fairly standard term in my experience.

    2. Re:BooHoo by Skye16 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or you could boycott the particularly onerous terms of your contract by paying your ETF and not giving AT&T your money any longer. You and I both know it doesn't cost them even remotely close to 95$ a month for your service - their profit margins are obscene. It's absolutely their right to request you pay that amount each month, and if you were suckered into a contract, that's a blow to you. Learn by your mistake by terminating the contract in the legal manner (and if that means waiting until they change the terms of the contract, so be it) and don't fucking enter another one like it again. Until you tell them you're not interesting in paying obscene costs or entering into their service with any contract (even forgoing your precious ball and chain for a while), they'll keep bending you over and blasting your asshole repeatedly. If you want to just lay there and take it, that's your prerogative, but kindly have the decency to shut the fuck up about how you're not receiving a perceived fair bargain from the entity you willfully signed your custom away to.

    3. Re:BooHoo by ScrewMaster · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You know Apple releases a new phone every year, and you know AT&T makes you sign a 2-year contract. Either pay the higher price for the upgrade or live through the horror of not having the latest shiny product until your contract runs out.

      Absolutely. Besides, early adopters always get the shaft. That's the price you pay for being an early adopter.

      Me, I bought a G1 a few months ago, and the G2 is coming out this month, I understand. I'll have to wait to see if I do, in fact, end up feeling screwed. If so ... I screwed myself and I did it willingly because I didn't want to wait.

      Bunch of crybabies.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    4. Re:BooHoo by Glendale2x · · Score: 1

      No shit. This isn't exactly news in cell phone land. I guess they thought the iPhone didn't fall under the normal rules?

      --
      this is my sig
    5. Re:BooHoo by icebike · · Score: 4, Insightful

      All well and good to posture, but those having an iPhone under the only contract terms available have sunk costs and can't do a thing to recover them.

      The phone is locked to ATT.

      ATT subsidized the iPhone heavily and wants to recover their costs. Its understandable.

      Yes, ATT should allow you to pay off your ETF (which by the way should ONLY include what they owe Apple for the phone) and let you start a new contract with a new phone.

      What could be more fair?

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    6. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yeah if you are paying $95 bucks a month then you really need all those extra minutes! That's $35/month more than I pay for my iPhone BTW

    7. Re:BooHoo by roc97007 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is genius.

      1) Apple culture heavily weighted towards having latest shiny object

      2) AT&T contract requires 2 year ownership or pay $200 penalty

      3) Apple maintains 1 year design cycle

      4) Profit!!

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    8. Re:BooHoo by rirugrat · · Score: 2, Funny

      ...and don't fucking enter another one like it again.

      I didn't know Ballmer owned an iPhone.

    9. Re:BooHoo by MrCrassic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Exactly. I guess with a phone this popular, inane complaints will always rise to the surface.

      This is the case with every mobile provider, at least here in the United States. You sign a contract, get a subsidized phone, and in a few years, provided that the phone qualifies, a customer can apply for a discounted upgrade. It's worked nicely for T-Mobile, Sprint and VZW customers since it's conception.

      HTFU.

    10. Re:BooHoo by gumbi+west · · Score: 4, Insightful

      AT&T has a profit margin of 10%. If you think that is insanely high... I'd rather not be in business with you.

    11. Re:BooHoo by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      And it is just like every other carrier on the planet if your renewal isn't up you pay full ticket for a phone.
      This is a none story.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    12. Re:BooHoo by MrCrassic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You know what's somewhat ironic about all of this? At this point, the iPhone is probably the easiest phone to unlock EVAR, and is also the poster child for phones chained to tailored calling plans.

      Education goes a long way...

    13. Re:BooHoo by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      You know Apple releases a new phone every year, and you know AT&T makes you sign a 2-year contract. Either pay the higher price for the upgrade or live through the horror of not having the latest shiny product until your contract runs out.

      Yeah, but who cares if AT&T has to listen to people whine? Maybe by being vocal they'll get to have their cake and eat it too.
       
      I still agree...if you want special phone pricing, you wait till your contract is almost up and you twist someone's arm. That's how it's been since the beginning of time. But I've got a 2G iPhone and about a year left on my contract (waited a while to activate) so if these people get their way, you won't see me complaining.
       
      I can't shake the feeling that this "news" was posted to spur the usual anti-Apple flamebait and the associated ad impressions.

    14. Re:BooHoo by malchus842 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But it's not being screwed. You and I willingly bought G1 phones, and have used them. Nobody forced us to buy them, nor enter into the contract. So when the G2 hits, if I really want it that bad, I'll pay the price. If not, I can wait out the 2 years and get the discount(*).

      (*)I have 5 lines on the family plan, so in the end, I can pretty much upgrade any time I like. My kids love getting the hand-me-down cool phones, and my wife isn't into technology. :-)

    15. Re:BooHoo by cencithomas · · Score: 4, Funny

      AT&T has a profit margin of 10%. If you think that is insanely high... I'd rather not be in business with you.

      [citation needed]

      --
      ...'tis easier to blame than to improve.
    16. Re:BooHoo by ScrewMaster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But it's not being screwed.

      Yes, I agree. That was precisely my point. I meant screwed as in "aw, damn, this new model is like, way cooler than my old piece of junk". I didn't mean to imply that the vendor or cell phone company were in any way to blame for my impatience.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    17. Re:BooHoo by Forge · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A mere price doubling? These people should consider themselves fortunate.

      I remember nearly a decade ago when our then only phone company sold it's top end cellular to staff at a 30% discount with a 2 year interest free payment plan. They thought it was really a great deal, ontil 18 months later when a new phone matching or exceeding all features of that model started selling for less than the monthly installments.

      As for myself, I have never bought a cellphone costing more than 2X the absolute cheapest phone on the local market. But, that's just because I am not rich.

      Here is a more general rule of thumb: If your phone is crushed by a car 15 minutes after your last backup and those backups are safe, you should only be upset over the inconvenience of being out of touch for a few hours and having to restore on the new phone. If the loss of the phone instrument itself is a cause for concern, you payed too much.

      --
      --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
    18. Re:BooHoo by the_humeister · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What exactly do you consider "obscene" profit margins? If you look at AT&T's income statement, their profit margin is on the order of 10%. That's not anywhere close to "obscene." For comparison, Microsoft's margins are closer to 30%.

    19. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You see, you bozo, this is how we get screwed. Consider this, we must pay $175 as early termination fee if we break the contract. This is reduced by $5 for every month you are on contract with AT&T. So, assuming that you break the contrat, you pay about $115 in early termination (after being on it for 1 year). Plus the $36 dollars for "re-activating" a new iPhone. So, if you go this route (Break the Contract and buy new phone), you end up paying only about $151 MORE than the subsidized price. So, you would think that because AT&T is charging you ETF, it must have recovered its cost...right?

      Except, AT&T will not allow you to terminate and then immediately buy a new iPhone. You have to wait for 30 days to 90 days before you can come back (to qualify as a "new" customer). So, you are paying $218 more than the the subsidized pricing ($200 premium + $18 as "upgrade fee". Net Net, you are losing 218-151=$67.....is that a bad deal? Thats the extra money you pay to let AT&T be your priviledged wireless provider.

    20. Re:BooHoo by drsquare · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Right here:
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      V

    21. Re:BooHoo by district · · Score: 1, Funny
      ...

      I screwed myself and I did it willingly because I didn't want to wait.

      I think thats a common story on /., screwmaster. *ducks*

    22. Re:BooHoo by cgenman · · Score: 5, Informative

      According to AT&T's announcement from 2008, their current early termination fee is 175 dollars minus 5 dollars per month that the contract was completed. For half-way through a 2-year contract, that's 115 dollars.

      So if you are thinking of paying the extra money and upgrading your phone, first pay the 115 bucks and cancel your account. Then apply for a new account with the no-contract discount. Instead of paying 399 for the phone, you'll only pay 314, or a savings of 85 dollars.

    23. Re:BooHoo by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 1

      I think everyone's talking hypothetically in defense of the poor helpless sheeps.

    24. Re:BooHoo by sootman · · Score: 1

      This is weird, though, because I bought an original iPhone in August 2007 and I bought a 3G in October 2008 and I just paid $199 the second time, along with renewing my contract for another two years. Has something changed? I was planning to upgrade again.

      PS: AT&T, what is wrong with you? I can understand not wanting to let people tether, but NO MMS UNTIL THE END OF SUMMER? WHAT THE FUCK?!?!?

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    25. Re:BooHoo by White+Shade · · Score: 0

      $85 minus the cost of having to tell everyone your new phone number, friends, family, any company you've done business with, etc etc... and then all the missed calls and confusion from people who don't get the message, etc.

      not worth it, imo!

      --
      ìì!
    26. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As for myself, I have never bought a cellphone costing more than 2X the absolute cheapest phone on the local market. But, that's just because I am not rich.

      So 2x $0 = 0? (since you can always find a contract w/ a free phone) Why not just say $0?

    27. Re:BooHoo by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You use a wikipedia reference when wikipedia would answer you? Just go to the AT&T article and look at the little numbers on the right. Looks like $119 billion in revenue and $10 billion in net income so it's so about 1/12 it's in the ballpark.

      Sometimes I wonder how you spend $100 billion in one year. Where can you go and say "I have $100 billion to spend"? Delay upgrading your corporate phones one 6-month cycle, that's what an odd billion? That will feed me for 500,000 years. Fire all the sites' maintenance guys who work on the southwest middle lawn. Get the other guys at each site to cover for him. In return, 500,000 years of the warm fuzzy feeling commoners get knowing that while they starve their taxes are making their adored queen comfortable and happy.

    28. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      Wha? You don't get to keep your phone number in teh US of A when you change contracts?
      Hahahahahahahahahahahaha.
      Losers.

    29. Re:BooHoo by pete6677 · · Score: 1

      So have a trusted friend or significant other sign up for service on your behalf. AT&T will not be the wiser.

    30. Re:BooHoo by node+3 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Or just tack 1 year onto the end of my existing contract (they give you the full subsidized price after one year). As it stands, I can't buy a new iPhone at a reasonable price. I'm not willing to pay an extra $200, so I'll wait. However, if AT&T doesn't do something to make this right, I may just wait until next summer, and jump to Verizon's iPhone instead.

      It's clear that AT&T doesn't want to keep me as a customer by providing great service at a great price, but instead by forcing me to stay via contract (I signed it, I'm not complaining about the terms, but that they aren't even trying the carrot, but merely relying on the stick). I'm even willing to meet them part way. But that they won't go out of their way for me, I won't do so for them. I'd say "their loss", but really, we both lose out. Idiots.

    31. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know Apple releases a new phone every year, and you know AT&T makes you sign a 2-year contract. Either pay the higher price for the upgrade or live through the horror of not having the latest shiny product until your contract runs out.

      fail

      AT&T isn't just charging a higher price for people who are under the 2 year contract -- they're also charging a higher price to anyone who had been under contract in some unspecified period past.

      I do not have an iPhone. I've had an AT&T plan for several years, and have been out of contract for over a year. I checked, and I do not qualify for the discounted price until the middle of next year.

      Are pre-paid carriers subject to the number portability regime? If so, it would be cheaper for me to port my number to a pre-paid carrier and back than it would be to buy the phone from AT&T. Plus, that would cost AT&T a lot more money.

    32. Re:BooHoo by vipz · · Score: 1

      Do you still get to keep your current phone number if you cancel first?

    33. Re:BooHoo by vipz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Same here. In fact, I "pre-screwed" myself by consciously buying the G1 without a contract, paying $380 for the privilege to remain out of a contract.

    34. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you payed too much.

      It's "paid", not payed.

      HTH. HAND.

    35. Re:BooHoo by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Probably because Microsoft's developed expensive products but after that they just have to pay people to stick CDs in boxes and direct the incoming dump trucks full of gold coins. I'm not surprised to see such a high margin if they're in the "sit on our successful product and let it sell for awhile" phase of its operations.

      I bet any sales of product based business model will generally have a higher margin than continuous providing a servic

    36. Re:BooHoo by SyncNine · · Score: 3, Informative

      Exactly -- I worked this out with my fiancee. She was about to buy a new iPhone anyways so we signed her up for a new plan and I paid for the phone. She gets my 16GB iPhone 3G when the new one comes in and I get the shiny new 32GB iPhone 3G S and only paid $299 for it.

      On a side note, all you clowns complaining about $499 for an upgrade price, for some reason my account didn't even qualify for that upgrade -- they wanted $699 from me, claiming I wasn't eligible for upgrade pricing until Dec 2009. $322 and change later and I've got a shiny new iPhone 3G S. It's not impossible. One of my co-workers got AT&T to provide him the $299 upgrade pricing just by calling, complaining, and threatening to cancel and pay the ETF. They sent him over to 'customer retention', who asked why he was cancelling and when he told them they offered him the upgrade at the $299 price...

      Of course, he started at $499 -- not $699. I figured since my account was already screwed for some reason, I'd leave it be. Plus, if in December they reset my contract entirely for some reason (as the site shows it will), I'll have a free upgrade just in time for the next upgrade next year :P.

      --
      To the darkened skies once more, and ever onward.
    37. Re:BooHoo by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 2, Informative

      You can keep your number.

    38. Re:BooHoo by Jophiel04 · · Score: 2, Informative

      You can carry your phone number over from carrier to carrier, but if you cancel your contract you no longer have a claim to that number unless another carrier requests to take over the number from AT&T, which since they were your provider before and after, won't happen.

      Sometihng else to consider is that AT&T has no obligation to sell you the second contract, nor can you be certain they don't do some sort of blacklisting of people who cancel their contracts. Seems like a lot of hassle and risk for saving $85.

    39. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe if you port your phone to another carrier, but they won't cancel your line and then open up another for you with the same phone number just so you can get a cheaper iPhone on the same network.

    40. Re:BooHoo by tthomas48 · · Score: 1

      Well, that's not all iPhone revenue. iPhone could have a 0% profit margin or 75%. No real way of knowing.

      That said, using gross vs. net to come up with profit margin seems to be taking into account the fact that the place is running like a well oiled machine. From what I understand AT&T makes the Federal Government look like a model of efficiency.

    41. Re:BooHoo by ewolfr · · Score: 1

      No, you will get assigned a new number because it's a new account. I think you need to wait 60 or 90 days before a number gets freed in the system and you can select it if available.

    42. Re:BooHoo by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 4, Funny

      I don't even want to touch Kindle until I see "Kindle Final - We Will Never Upgrade This Product Again". Every time there's a new kindle I'm like whew I barely didn't buy the last one and now there's a thousand must-have features yay but WAIT WHAT ABOUT THE NEXT ONE.

      Similarly, I'm never upgrading from my 4 year old laptop, ever. If I spend the money then 2 months later people will be floating past my window on flying scooters with 8-socket quad core xeons on their wrists. I'm terrified of the day I realize I'm counting memory in gigs the same way I count in megs (64 128 256 512 1024 range).

    43. Re:BooHoo by bertoelcon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I bet any sales of product based business model will generally have a higher margin than continuous providing a servic

      And thats why the Media Industries won't change with the times.

      --
      Anything can be found funny, from a certain point of view.
    44. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prove it

    45. Re:BooHoo by pyite · · Score: 1

      But I've got a 2G iPhone and about a year left on my contract (waited a while to activate) so if these people get their way, you won't see me complaining.

      You're in luck. If you have a 2G, you can pay the discounted price for the new phone. This is because the 2G was not subsidized, so AT&T isn't losing anything by letting you upgrade early (basically 2G -> 3GS upgrades are being treated the same as 2G -> 3G upgrades). I have about a month left on my 2G contract and I went to preorder and it offered me the discounted price.

      --

      "Nature doesn't care how smart you are. You can still be wrong." - Richard Feynman

    46. Re:BooHoo by Centium76 · · Score: 1

      Seriously, is it really that hard to get a different phone? The iPhone is overrated and overpriced... There are plenty of more cost efficient phones with the same if not more capability than the iPhone.

    47. Re:BooHoo by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      This is genius.

      1) Apple culture heavily weighted towards having latest shiny object

      2) AT&T contract requires 2 year ownership or pay $200 penalty

      3) Apple maintains 1 year design cycle

      4) Profit!!

      And if you thought that was bad, Rogers in Canada forces a three year contract. And unlike the US, there aren't any other GSM carriers that Apple could threaten to switch to.

    48. Re:BooHoo by Korin43 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pretty much any phone these days comes with Bluetooth, and if you have Bluetooth, you can use Bitpim.

    49. Re:BooHoo by mysidia · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They could have a 10000% profit margin in their text messaging and cellular plans business.

      While having massive losses or only modest profit in other businesses. It just depends on how much of their business is cellular.

      A lot of the business ATT has in phone companies it acquired is not cellular. Think plain old telephone service.

      Long distance, and other carrier services...

      Recall that in the areas where they are ILEC, they have build-out requirements imposed on them.... highly massive infrastructure costs to deploy certain telco services to all residences..

      And "tarrifed" services, which are price-regulated, so they can't charge person A and person B in the same community different prices for their basic phone line (just because it's 100x as expensive to reach person B due to geography, doesn't mean they can charge person B $200/month instead of the normal $15/month, in order to recover costs).

      Yes, it can be expensive to deploy hundreds of antennas in a county to provide wireless connectivity. I won't say mobile services are dirt cheap.

      But compared to the costs of providing land line service to millions of homes, it could be just plain tiny......

      And i'm sure ATT has other businesses.

    50. Re:BooHoo by Dragonslicer · · Score: 4, Funny

      Right here:
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      The "Reply to This" button?

    51. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I screwed myself and I did it willingly because I didn't want to wait.

      I have never heard any other statement so succinctly describe my sex life, as yours does.

    52. Re:BooHoo by hardburn · · Score: 1

      You and I both know it doesn't cost them even remotely close to 95$ a month for your service - their profit margins are obscene

      The per-connection margins are pretty good, yes, but it gets eaten up by operating expenses pretty fast. Take a look at AT&T's financials. In 2008, they had $124,028 million in revenue, but only $12,867 million in net income, or about 10%. That's pretty good, but it's not fantastic, either. Google was at 29% in 2006, though that dipped to only 19% in 2008.

      --
      Not a typewriter
    53. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Greetings from a EU citizen. You guys need to lobby for number portability. It's a big step towards more competition when customers can switch to another provider without worrying about losing their phone number.

    54. Re:BooHoo by mysidia · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Maybe you signup for service with a 'temporary' carrier first, get just their free low-end phone, or preferably get an arrangement without a contract, or you rely on the fact you can cancel a new contract before 30 days without penalty if you return the phone.....

      Then you transfer the number from ATT to the temp carrier, while cancelling your ATT contract. Then a few weeks later, after that's a done deal, you go buy the new ATT contract and request to get the number transferred back to ATT

      You cancel service with the temp carrier before the 30 day "trial" limit.

    55. Re:BooHoo by natemc · · Score: 1

      Why do they give corporate discounts that are well below that. For example I get 22% off my monthly bill. Does that mean they lose 12% every month to have me as a customer? I doubt it.

    56. Re:BooHoo by natemc · · Score: 3, Informative

      You do have to wait 90 days to open a new account with them. I had an overzealous AT&T manager cancel my phone service after my 3rd Sony Ericsson broke in less than a week. I went to another store to open an account to only be told the above. So just be warned that you will be without for 3 months, at least.

    57. Re:BooHoo by vux984 · · Score: 1

      And unlike the US, there aren't any other GSM carriers that Apple could threaten to switch to.

      Yet.

      Bell and Telus are building a GSM network. They rightly think the writing's on the wall for CDMA; so they are ramping up GSM. They are planning to have GSM coverage in time for the 2010 winter olympics. How much coverage they'll have exactly is anyone's guess; but if Bell and Telus are serious they could probably pretty well have urban Canada well covered by then.

    58. Re:BooHoo by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Phones are only inexpensive because of the two year contract. These phones are not purchased fully up-front. The actual cost is amortized over two years, because most people wouldn't want to pay it (although Apple does have a lot of fans willing to buy anything Apple ships, and there are many people who will buy anything new as long as they can be first). If these people want new phones for the status of showing it off to their peers, then AT&T has provided an option for that.

      If you want a status symbol, then be willing to pay the price for it. And also don't complain later if the price drops so that any plebian can buy one.

    59. Re:BooHoo by mysidia · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Based on the normal timeframe of the wireless industry: the porting process for a wireless-to-wireless transfer should be completed within 2 and a half hours from the time the porting request is made of the old carrier by the new carrier.

      See here.

      If a carrier imposes an unreasonable (ridiculously long) timeframe such as 30, 60, or 90 days, they may incur the wrath of the FCC, e.g. regulatory action may result.

    60. Re:BooHoo by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but by waiting a little longer, you'll avoid being disappointed yet again, when Apple releases the next phone just after this one, and you would have been in the same predicament all over again had you decided to pay extra and buy today....

    61. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I got an ipod touch for christmas 2008. I was so pleased, until today. The iphone 3gs has a 800x480 display. Which means that the ipod touch will have that display and I will have the old model. Oh well at least it doesn't have a wheel, you'd be surprised at how many old ipods I see on the subway, unless we are being visited by time travelers from 2005. In any case, I'm saving up my toy money for the giant ipod touch tablet that does not yet exist. I will buy one. And then it will start all over again.

    62. Re:BooHoo by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Now they just need to offer an option of 1 year instead of 2 years, for half the subsidy.

      E.g. you get a "$200 discount" if you sign a 2-year contract, you get a "$100" discount if you sign a 1 year contract.... maybe you get a "$400 discount" if you sign a 4-year contract.......

      Come to think of it, maybe they should just let these iPhone loyal people buy the second phone with the discount and add 2 years to the remaining duration of their contract obligation, and possibly get them into a more expensive plan while they're at it.....

    63. Re:BooHoo by bruno.fatia · · Score: 1

      Seriously? I work for Vivo (a Telefonica & Portugal Telecom company) in Brazil. The estimated cost of a normal call is next to zero inside your own network (less than 0.02 USD) and for landlines and other operators is something small .Personal 3G costs 50 USD (_every_ single operator charges the same), but we offer enterprise 3G unlimited access at 20 USD. Do you really think they sell 3G access at a loss? And if they do, where does the commission (~60USD for each 3G modem sale with 24 months contract) from? Come on!

    64. Re:BooHoo by dhaines · · Score: 1

      Bunch of crybabies.

      Rabid Apple fanboy here, and I totally agree.

      Some folks always need the latest and greatest, sometimes that costs extra. But nothing wrong with a generation or two old... My 2007 Macs are still fast and strong. Last generation's Photoshop still handles 100% of my needs. My 3G, bought on launch day with full fanboy fanfare, is still kicking and I'm looking forward to the OS upgrade. Sometimes it's time for new toys, sometimes it's not.

      The contract terms weren't secret and no one could've reasonably thought it would be two years before the next iPhone came along. The issue here is the "gotta have" syndrome. And while Apple is good at building that hype, they're certainly not alone. Still haven't seen a rabid AT&T fanboy though...

    65. Re:BooHoo by Ziwcam · · Score: 2, Informative

      Greetings from a EU citizen. You guys need to lobby for number portability. It's a big step towards more competition when customers can switch to another provider without worrying about losing their phone number.

      We have number portability. What these folks above me are talking about is switching to the same provider and keeping your phone number. It might be possible in theory, but obviously the company is on to those tricks, and so the systems aren't set up to allow you to port a number from a current AT&T account to a new AT&T account and get the "new account" equipment discount.

    66. Re:BooHoo by Ziwcam · · Score: 1

      I'm terrified of the day I realize I'm counting memory in gigs the same way I count in megs (64 128 256 512 1024 range).

      For me (and many others, I'm sure), that day is here. My Performa 400 had 4 megs of RAM. My Macbook Pro has 4 gigs of RAM...

    67. Re:BooHoo by Mattazuma · · Score: 1

      So, what are you going to do with your unlocked 3G iPhone? The 3G only works with AT&T in the USA. Oh boy, I'm going to go to T-Mobile and surf on EDGE to save $20 a month. Us iPhone users are stuck with AT&T. It would be a bigger deal if there was a good cell network in the US, but they all suck.

    68. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a first-gen iPhone. I will be upgrading to a fancy new upgraded 3G iPhone in a few weeks. In my case, early-adoption has paid off rather well.

    69. Re:BooHoo by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      it's been said at least 1000 times on the interweb so far... the original iPhone had the customer paying FULL price and AT&T PAYING Apple to have the phone. So when you all ran to get the new phone AT&T used you to change the deal so they didn't have to pay Apple and you got a new phone.

      This time the money is all from AT&T's pocket, so they're not letting people off so easily.

    70. Re:BooHoo by JustNilt · · Score: 3, Informative

      Full disclosure: my soon-to-be-ex wife works at AT&T and often got calls like this when she did billing support.

      The variables involved in whether you get an early upgrade are weighted in how much you cost the company. If you're always calling for support or whining and demanding credits here and there you're likely to be told to pound sand on any early upgrade. The agents have a screen that tells them whether you are a profitable customer worth locking in or not.

      --
      You know the thing about UDP jokes? I don't care if you get it or not.
    71. Re:BooHoo by triceice · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I agree with you. I have been a smart phone user for over 10 years and I knew that after using my wife's iPhone that I wanted one. I also knew that means I would have to get back under contract. I had been an Cingular user without a contract for over 7 years (coverage in my area was better from them then from the others). I only bought unlocked phones and paid the full price for them. I know that I am under a 2 year and went in to it with eye wide open. AND SO DID EVERYBODY ELSE. Simply put it's your money and no one forced you to sign the contract.

    72. Re:BooHoo by jonfr · · Score: 1

      Is it 3G 850, 3G 1900 or 3G 2100 ? Because it matters. In Europe, 3G 2100 and 3G 900 are used.

    73. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing is, speculation and guarantee are two different things. I have had my iPhone for 1 month and 5 days and I can't upgrade or get the deal price on the new one. I feel screwed. No one could know for sure whether they were definitely coming out with a new version of the iPhone and/or when because of Apple's strict secrecy. So, I don't feel like I screwed myself, AT&T/Apple screwed ME! I just got off the phone with AT&T and they said that if I bought my phone 5 days later, I would have been able to get the new phone with only a restocking fee trade-in. Fuckers!!!

    74. Re:BooHoo by stun · · Score: 0

      and not to mention most /.ers have yet to find the G-spot *ducks head*

    75. Re:BooHoo by Oz82 · · Score: 1

      Interestingly enough, as a wireless admin for a medium sized company, I can attest that our discount is more than that percentage. So, is ATT losing money to provide us with phone service?

    76. Re:BooHoo by sootman · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the info. I know you think I'm dense but I just saw this story a couple hours ago (and I'm at work, so I didn't have time to scour teh entire intarweb) and I'm not a frequent phone buyer in general (before the iPhone, it was 2 phones in 7 years) so I didn't know the details. The funny thing is, I DID buy my first iPhone after the initial price cut--though, come to think of it, I guess that was just Apple cutting the price, not AT&T subsidizing it.

      Still though, just like the way banks used to have great introductory offers, I've always hated seeing existing customers getting a worse deal than new customers. (I've been w/ AT&T/Cingular/AT&T wireless since 1997.)

      That said, I'd do it all again. The camera is a bit nicer overall, video being the biggest feature, but if I had to choose, I'd still say that GPS was a more worthwhile upgrade than video recording, variable focus, and a compass. Faster CPU and apps (especially Safari) would be nice, but it is by no means unusable now.

      That said, if the revolt works and AT&T makes it reasonable* to upgrade, I'll be there.

      * Reasonable for me, not them. ;-)

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    77. Re:BooHoo by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      And since they can sell off the old iPhone on Ebay to unlockers to partly make up the difference, why the whining?

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    78. Re:BooHoo by astanley218 · · Score: 0

      I thought the new policy was going to save me when my wife's iphone broke last fall. Except that when I read AT&T's announcement I found this:

      San Antonio, Texas, March 31, 2008
      Beginning on May 25, the company's new and renewing wireless customers who enter into one- or two-year service agreements will no longer be required to pay a single, flat early termination fee. Instead, that fee, which is $175, will be progressively lowered by $5 during each month, every month, for the term of the contract. (The single, flat ETF will continue to apply to new and renewing customers who enter into one- or two-year service agreements prior to May 25.)

      So, for everyone who bought an iphone in the last 2 weeks the termination fee is only $175! The rest of us still have to pay what was on the contract the day we signed it.

    79. Re:BooHoo by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What kills me is that people still get into these plans willingly. Its been years since most of them started doing the cell phone game, and they should know better by now. I looked at the three year plan one cell company wanted me to enter into years ago and decided to buy the phone for full price instead.

      Of course, our short attention spans allow us to both sign a two year contract and expect a new phone the next year on that same plan, and be confused why we have to pay more when the phone is worth what they're charging for it.

      Its not like they're selling you a $200 iPhone for $400. They're selling you a $400 iPhone for $400, with a discount for signing a NEW contract. Jeez.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    80. Re:BooHoo by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      There are several companies I can think of with lower profit margins than this. Oil and gas retailers come to mind, with profit margins well under 5% most of the year, but often healthy profits due to huge volume.

      Volume makes all the difference.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    81. Re:BooHoo by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      They spend it on purpose to avoid being taxed on it. Welcome to tax avoidance and why nobody has cash on hand to recover in economic down-turns.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    82. Re:BooHoo by pluther · · Score: 1

      I don't know which it is.
      Which one's better?
      'Cuz I know it's not that one.

      --
      If the masses can keep you down, you're not the Ubermensch.
    83. Re:BooHoo by MikeBabcock · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm waiting for "Books sold on this product will never again need to be checked for authenticity and can be ported to any future Kindle device you purchase, and if we ever go under or cancel this offer, we will give you the book in PDF format for free."

      That is to say, I'm probably never buying one.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    84. Re:BooHoo by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      ... unfortunately, one of the service reps I dealt with actually had the gonads to tell me to switch carriers. I asked for a manager. I got the deal I wanted.

      I knew full well they were treating me poorly, and I also knew that talking to people higher up the pay scale often fixes that problem.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    85. Re:BooHoo by debatem1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I just switched, and my number was available instantly, although they wanted about 900 forms of identification before they would go through with it.
      In retrospect, telling my friends and family my new number was probably a better choice than handing everybody else my SSN, but hey, them's the breaks.

    86. Re:BooHoo by tyrione · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Apple has $30 Billion plus cash on hand. Microsoft even more. I guess they love to pay taxes, by your logic? AT&T is heavily investing into their infrastructure as the market continues to demand more.

    87. Re:BooHoo by mjwx · · Score: 1, Interesting

      At this point, the iPhone is probably the easiest phone to unlock EVAR

      Really,

      Even easier then my HTC Dream, Nokia 6500 Classic and Nokia N71. I didn't think it was possible but apparently unlocking the Iphone is even easier then buying an unlocked phone to begin with. Sorry but your theory falls apart when phones are sold outright and unlocked (if this isn't done in your country it isn't my fault). Besides this HTC and Nokia aren't actively fighting unlockers with each update (no matter how futile this is). If you bought a locked Nokia bought from a Telco you just have to ask for it to be unlocked and they are by law obligated to do it (you are still bound to the contract you signed under contract law however) with Nokia its a simple code to unlock, you cant do this with an Iphone due to the design of the device (no supported unlock path, telco's are justified in not supplying hacks to unlock phones).

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    88. Re:BooHoo by tyrione · · Score: 1

      Download their 10-Q you lazy slob. Find the information for yourself. It's there for the taking.

      Oh Hell: http://biz.yahoo.com/e/090507/t10-q.html

      They are all here: http://finance.yahoo.com/q/sec?s=t

    89. Re:BooHoo by TurboNed · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, if your phone can't tell you how to spell "paid," you may not have paid enough.

    90. Re:BooHoo by curunir · · Score: 1

      There's another option...and no, it's not whining about it online hoping that AT&T will generously forgo the profits they're contractually obligated to receive.

      There are plenty of sites that offer you out of your contract if they or you can find someone who wants in to take your place. If you own an iPhone 3G that's in good condition, you can offer people the option to get an iPhone 3G and a 1-year contract with no up-front cost. If they were buying the iPhone not-S 3G new, they would have to pay $99-$199 up front and have a 2-year contract. There's got to be plenty of people that would find that offer appealing.

      And at that point, you're out of your contract and free to drop $299 on the new one.

      --
      "Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos!"
    91. Re:BooHoo by NovaHorizon · · Score: 2, Informative

      only if you port out to another carrier, or wait for the number to re-enter the pool. Otherwise I don't think they have access to the tools needed to regrab that number.

    92. Re:BooHoo by Czmyt · · Score: 1

      Even better is the way that AT&T and Verizon Wireless seem to operate now: If you have a two-year contract, they will let you upgrade your phone and receive the usual subsidy discount after 17 to 20 months, so that you are more likely to choose to upgrade your phone and stay with them for another two year commitment, as opposed to waiting the full two years before you could switch to another provider without penalty. So I recommend that anyone who wants to upgrade to call AT&T and see how long it really is before they can upgrade and receive the subsidy.

    93. Re:BooHoo by The_mad_linguist · · Score: 2, Funny

      I would think it would be harder to code a lock for the phone, and then break through the security.

    94. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no, what this is is plain and simple. you agree to buy a phone at a large discount. at the same time you also agree to such and such length of service. you think they like giving you a $400 for $200? the discount is included in the price of service its like you are leasing the phone that is why it is so cheap compared to what it should be. the alternative is less restricting service contracts but more expensive phones which do you prefer. remember we all gotta pay the bills somehow.

    95. Re:BooHoo by anagama · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I looked at the three year plan one cell company wanted me to enter into years ago and decided to buy the phone for full price instead.

      Of course, our short attention spans allow us to both sign a two year contract and expect a new phone the next year on that same plan ...

      I bought my phone 7 years ago this month. Paid $180, did have to replace the keypad at some point with one from a different phone of the same model I bought off Ebay for $3. The thing still works great, but sadly, Qwest is going out of the cell business completely on Oct. 31. I was proud to have the oldest phone of anyone I know, but I got there without really thinking. I've never been all that excited about cell phones and once I made I plunge, I stopped thinking about it altogether. Maybe that is another kind of short attention span.

      Anyway, I've been testing out a drug dealer phone from boost mobile. Doesn't do anything fancy but the speakerphone sounds great, way better than my wife's iphone in both input and output. The phone is only $60, and for $50/month (no contract period) I get unlimited talk and text. If something really cool comes out, like an iPhone Nano or an iPhone shaped to fit one's palm(*), I can go for it without any contractual issues.

      (*) Thin looks cool, but the iPhone's dimensions are not ergonomic as a phone. I have plenty of Apple hardware and love their notebooks for the sleek melding of form and function. With the iPhone however, function and design are poorly integrated by the fact that non-phone priorities overwhelmed the primary purpose of the device.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    96. Re:BooHoo by infosinger · · Score: 1

      I bought the original iPhone and could not inexpensively upgrade to the 3G last year. Imagine going 2 years on the EDGE network -- yawn. Now its my turn -- hooray!

    97. Re:BooHoo by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      Nice. Thanks for the info.

    98. Re:BooHoo by Demerara · · Score: 1

      I agree completely. It's Apple and AT&T People - what did you expect??

      As they say in Dublin in these situations "I'm bitin' me nails in an orgy of indifference"...

      --
      Backward%20compatibility%20is%20over-rated
    99. Re:BooHoo by Forge · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My fault for not Clarifying.

      I live in Jamaica. Our telecoms regulations are somewhat different and our phone companies are a lot different. (especially the dominant cellular provider).

      The most popular phone plan (Something like 93% of the market) is "prepaid". Meaning. You can buy a phone and spend less than U$10 per year on call credit if all you do is receive calls. (They require at least one top-up every quarter)

      With that kind of structure, the phone companies take a gamble every time they subsidize the cost of an instrument. For this reason, mid range phones are sold at near cost and High end phones are sold at a profit.

      Note the prices. The Exchange rate is roughly JM $90 to US $1. So that Bottom of the line Nokia 1200 is selling for under $13 with no contract or obligation. A true disposable phone. While the BlackBerry Storm is $777.

      --
      --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
    100. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the problem with cancelling, paying up and opening a new account, and how is it a 'trick'? It is _fulfilling_ the old contract, and resubscribing again, why won't they be allowing it? Sheesh, and I thought contracts here suck.

    101. Re:BooHoo by coolsnowmen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm sure it might be possible to game the system, but the amount of time you lose on the phone with multiple levels of customer service if anything goes wrong (and it will) will make it not really worth it.

    102. Re:BooHoo by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      I screwed myself and I did it willingly because I didn't want to wait.

      It's good that you were willing (not sure how that would work otherwise) but it doesn't count. You're still a virgin, or "waiting for marriage" if you prefer.

    103. Re:BooHoo by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      PS: calling yourself "screwmaster" isn't fooling anyone.

    104. Re:BooHoo by roc97007 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Don' look at me, I have no intention of owning one of those things any time soon. With phones, I tend to choose carefully, buy once, and then keep it until it can't be fixed anymore. Previous phone a Palm 680, and frankly it was somewhat of a relief when it finally quit. Current phone a Blackberry Bold, and I plan to keep it for a good long time.

      Frankly, I observe without understanding this compulsion to have every new thing. If your phone was good enough a year ago, isn't it still? If it wasn't, whyinhell didn't you buy something that was?

      Mind you, if the iPhone had had mms and cut-n-paste and stereo bluetooth and a decent camera with video and flash (which it still doesn't) a year ago, I might have gotten it instead of the Bold, which does have these things. But it didn't, so I didn't. And even then, the lack of a micro-sd slot may have been a deal-breaker.

      But all this is moot. I got the phone I wanted. I like my phone. I plan to keep it. I have to question how much you could like your phone if you want to dump it at the first opportunity. And for such paltry improvements.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    105. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iStupids* are cheapskates and posers. Love watching App£e abuse their weakness and suck them dry.

      *bought some App£e shit

    106. Re:BooHoo by mjwx · · Score: 1

      I would think it would be harder to code a lock for the phone, and then break through the security.

      That was kind of a sub point, most people aren't interested in breaking the security given that contract law states you are obliged to pay anyway (some Australian carriers don't offer a early termination fee nor are obliged to, a phone contract is similar to a loan) but a few would like to use the phone with other carriers or on holidays and want it unlocked. Nokia and most other manufacturers don't make anything beyond a superficial attempt to lock their handsets, the most sophisticated attempts are requiring a special USB connector to enter the code to unlock the phone, most models can be unlocked by entering in a code you've received from your telco.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    107. Re:BooHoo by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Presumably, if you're in a contract with AT&T, then you already have a phone... no need to get another one.

    108. Re:BooHoo by imapopsensation · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What is it about a some iPhone users that makes them think that the general rule of lending and new product pricing doesn't apply to them? When a new product comes out, its costs more. Borrowing at interest or signing payment contracts sometimes offsets that new product price so you an get that new product smell. Getting it at new user price requires a two year contract, and a new customer opp for ATNT. When a new car comes out, you can get 5000 back for signing a 60 month lease to 8% interest. It happens with every manufacturer and every new product, period. Instead of wasting time iWhining about it, why not look at the monarchy subscribed to when you buy a closed phone, from a single service provider, with a limited (selective) development platform, with a single outlet for purchasing things? Shouldn't this be more concern then most shiny thing in the room?

    109. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And i'm sure ATT has other businesses.

      Like monkey.

    110. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2-year contracts pretty common, so is the offer of a new phone for contract renewal. However, I've never heard of a phone upgrade for people on a two-year plan just because a new phone was released.
      Hell, I paid good money for my HTC Diamond, but I still don't expect someone to hand me a new one just because the Diamond 2's out... Or what next, should I be asking for a new laptop because theres a new GPU? New house because ones been built somewhere?

    111. Re:BooHoo by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

      In the ten to thirty Euro range Bluetooth is nonexistant. For example, Nokia's cheapest Bluetooth phone is the 2630, which goes for sixty bucks. The cheapest Samsung I could find was the SGH-J150 for 120 bucks. Sagem my411X, 100 Euros. Motorola PEBL, 100 Euros. I wasn't able to find much out about BenQ and Sony; BenQs German site doesn't mention mobile phones and Sony uses a Flash widget incompatible with my player.

      Fact is, Bluetooth in mobile phones is still seen as a premium feature and if you're not ready to pay three digits (with the laudable exception of Nokia) you won't get it. Of course you can go with a contract but if you don't want to pay horrendous sums for a mobile phone you usually don't want to pay horrendous sums for a contract either. NB: I'm in Germany where "twenty bucks a month" is considered horrendously expensive by the casual talker - prepaid or semiprepaid is a much better deal.

      PS: Yes, since most manufacturers will sell you the data cable separately, for those unwilling to spend much on their mobile phone the SIM is the only way of moving data to and from their phone. Well, most likely only from.

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
    112. Re:BooHoo by WillyDavidK · · Score: 1

      I know that it's one that AT&T uses in the US, but T-Mobile doesn't, because unlocked iPhone 3Gs can't use the 3G network on T-Mobile

      --
      For lack of a better signature...
    113. Re:BooHoo by WillyDavidK · · Score: 1

      ie, he is citing himself

      --
      For lack of a better signature...
    114. Re:BooHoo by Archibald+Buttle · · Score: 1

      You know what's somewhat ironic about all of this? At this point, the iPhone is probably the easiest phone to unlock EVAR, and is also the poster child for phones chained to tailored calling plans.

      Er, no. This is completely inaccurate.

      Original EDGE iPhones are easily unlocked. iPhone 3G devices with OS 2.2.0 or older are easily unlocked. iPhone 3G devices running the latest released OS (2.2.1) can currently be "jailbroken", but not unlocked. Jailbreaking means only that you can run applications that have not come from Apple's App Store.

      As for the iPhone 3GS, and the forthcoming iPhone OS 3.0, the situation there is not yet clear. It is however certain that there will be no unlock solution for the iPhone 3GS when it is launched, and possibly not for several months after release. As for iPhone OS 3.0 running on existing phones, there may be a jailbreak shortly after release, but it currently seems highly unlikely that there will be an unlock solution.

      To be clear, if you go into a store today and buy an iPhone 3G, you will be stuck with a phone that can only be used on AT&T (or whatever your local carrier is). The same will be true with the iPhone 3GS when it is released.

    115. Re:BooHoo by WillyDavidK · · Score: 1

      Welcome to 20 years ago...

      --
      For lack of a better signature...
    116. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I modded you informative because of your asterisk. In Japan, every phone is built to a standard width, every phone but the iPhone. Japan's phones fit perfectly in your hand and are very comfortable to use. Unless you've got the hands of a basketball player, you can't use the iPhone with one hand.

    117. Re:BooHoo by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1

      10% profitability is roughly the average across all industries, actually.

    118. Re:BooHoo by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      My old Siemens S65 can back up just fine (using IrDA or Bluetooth). Before that I had Siemens S30 (AFAIR) which also could be backed up just fine (over the serial port).

      I bought both of them for less than $100.

    119. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I call BS. The "unlimited" plan is a standard 2G plan. There is no magic bullet here.

      http://www.vivo.com.br/portal/servicos_vivo_zap.php
      # Ilimitado: redução de velocidade ao atingir 2GB de dados trafegados.

      However, I can't read Portuguese, so I'm just guessing what that means.

      AT&T is offering _unlimited_ meaning no cap for US$35.

    120. Re:BooHoo by Digit+Machine · · Score: 1

      You can port numbers to prepaid phones. Just buy a crappy prepaid phone for 15 bucks and port the number to it, then port it back. It couldn't be easier. 1 buy prepaid phone 2 port number to prepaid phone 3 pay to cancel att contract 4 buy new iphone at full price 5 sign back up with att ( they might charge a deposit since you cancelled before ) 6 port number back to att 7 show off your shiny new iphone to all your friends at the next poetry reading 8 bonus - tweet everyone about how clever you were to save $20

    121. Re:BooHoo by malchus842 · · Score: 1

      True enough. I buy something (computer, phone TV) when the features and price match what I think is reasonable. OR, if I absolutely have to have the device (which is rare), I understand the premium paid

      In the end, I know that very soon after my purchase there likely be a better/faster/cooler/more powerful device - that's how it's been since my first computer back in 1978. It's pretty much a fact of life

    122. Re:BooHoo by Bigby · · Score: 1

      I think the point was that AT&T has a high profit margin for their iPhone and/or calling plan business. AT&T the company obviously makes the standard 10% margin across the whole business. Extra margins usually get spent to subsidize other areas of the business. Take Microsoft and their Windows/Office/Studio business subsidizing pretty much everything else.

    123. Re:BooHoo by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "In retrospect, telling my friends and family my new number was probably a better choice than handing everybody else my SSN, but hey, them's the breaks."

      Yeah, that's gonna be my new adventure...getting a new iPhone and NOT giving them my SSN. I have no problem giving a deposit, but, I don't give out my ssn for something not related to SS income taxes...

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    124. Re:BooHoo by qurk · · Score: 1

      I agree. AT&T has enough issues and people have enough reasons to complain, people who want standard pricing to bend around them just cause they are the most loyal Apple guy don't help anyone. The two year plan helps subsidize the cost of the phone. I don't understand. All you hear is iphone people saying that any other comparable device sucks compared to their wonderful technological wonder of a phone, and now suddenly they just can't live without the next super duper upgrade, which may or may not still be inferior to what they had just been dissing a short while ago. Suck it up Apple guys, you always have and always will pay a premium to flaunt your superiority at the rest of the world :(

    125. Re:BooHoo by hattig · · Score: 1

      Indeed it's not as if you don't know what you're getting into when you sign a TWO YEAR CONTRACT that includes a subsidised phone.

      There's probably $20 (or thereabouts) you are paying each month for your phone hardware (paying off the subsidy) so over 2 years that's $480 for AT&T, who probably buy the phone for list price + $400 from Apple.

      If you want an upgrade, it's obvious that AT&T would like you to pay off the unpaid subsidy left remaining on your contract. What is the point of this story - whiny people who can't commit to their phone contract and want something for nothing.

      It does seem like millions of people are happy paying $95 a month. I personally think that's silly, but it's their choice.

    126. Re:BooHoo by hattig · · Score: 1

      I guess you *could* - no guarantees that AT&T won't just say "no".

      But ... really? for $85? FUCK THAT.

      Personally I'd wait and see what the iPhone OS 3 update provided to me on my existing iPhone (if I had one), and then decide. I don't need the latest and greatest phone hardware every year if what I have works just fine.

    127. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      San Antonio, Texas, March 31, 2008

      So, for everyone who bought an iphone in the last 1 year and 2 weeks the termination fee is only $175! The rest of us still have to pay what was on the contract the day we signed it.

      Fixed it for you.

    128. Re:BooHoo by Jay+L · · Score: 1

      So if you are thinking of paying the extra money and upgrading your phone, first pay the 115 bucks and cancel your account. Then apply for a new account

      I was thinking the same thing. But as I understand it, you can't create a new AT&T account until 60 days after you cancel your old one - and there are credit checks involved, so you can't just open the new account for your nonexistent "roommate". You'd have to port your number somewhere else for 60 days (and, unless you unlock the phone, switch phones as well).

      I've also read (unsourced) that there will be a price drop on July 12; there was speculation that it was AT&T making sure they'd signed up all the new accounts they could (with sufficient stocking levels) before dropping the price for existing accounts.

      But I don't know that I believe that. July 12 is the one-year anniversary of the 3G, and I think long-time AT&T customers are getting the full discount after 12 months. So it could be that someone misinterpreted that, and assumed that *everyone* gets the discount on July 12.

      their current early termination fee is 175 dollars minus 5 dollars per month

      If nothing else, that says it's foolish to spend $200 more on the contract-free, unsubsidized version (unless you live in an area where T-Mobile really is good enough). If you buy the "early upgrade" 32GB phone for $499, you could cancel immediately and still pay $25 less to AT that deal gets better as you wait longer, but it never gets worse.

    129. Re:BooHoo by Xest · · Score: 1

      Are you sure? Some phones can be unlocked just by typing in a code on the keypad. I'd say that's probably easier than any method for unlocking the iPhone to be fair.

      Of course, some aren't locked in the first place also.

    130. Re:BooHoo by Sandbags · · Score: 1

      one problem... you failed to completely read the ETF fee terms... You not only have to pay the fee, but you have to pay the prorated subsidized cost of the device as well, which means payiong the difference between the $199 or $299 you paid for the phone with your contract, and the $599 or $699 the phone actually retails for, prorated by the number of months you maintained your contract.

      However, MOST people out there bought the 3G less than a year ago, and mostly would not expect to upgrade. Some closer to the 1 year mark might be interested in the new features, but they'll have the eat the $200 extra charge for not having completed their current contract.

      Me, I have a 1st gen Edge iPhone I've had for 19 months, and I can upgrade for free. I skipped 3G as the feature difference simply did not justify the phone cost plus the $15 a month plan incrase. 3G owners have the same choice: is 1.1MP, a better lense, some video capability, a compass, and a slightly faster CPU really worth $200 more vs. waiting 6-10 months? (especially since 3D runs just fine on the 3G as is, and nearly all the new tricks are backported in the software).

      --
      There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
    131. Re:BooHoo by Sandbags · · Score: 1

      you forgot to include refunding to AT&T the subsidized cost included in the device, $400, prorated over your contract. It's either that or return the iPhone...

      --
      There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
    132. Re:BooHoo by MrCrassic · · Score: 1

      Sorry about the misinformation. I've only owned the non-3G iPhone flashed to iPhone OS v2.2, so I referred to that in my post.

    133. Re:BooHoo by Sandbags · · Score: 1

      exactly. Anyone who bought an iPhone 3G in the last 6 months should have been clearly aware that new devices were rumored, including some nice hardware improvements.

      When the Moto Razr came out it was $599 (WITH a contract), within 6 months it was $399. Within 2 years it was being given away for $99 on contracts... by year 3 it was simply $99, no contract, and free otherwise, and by then it was also the 2nd or 3rd revision of the hardware (the original had SHITTY call quality, or so claimed all my coworkers on the same network when their calls dropped and I had 5 bars).

      You want it now? Fork over the cash. You see a movie in the theatre on release day it's $9 a ticket. 4 weeks later you can find $7 shows in many places, a couple weeks later it's on $2 screens. Then it's $3.99 to rent. Waiting makes everything cheaper. Don;t complain about Apple and AT&T, complain about general microeconomics.

      --
      There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
    134. Re:BooHoo by oudzeeman · · Score: 1

      not once you cancel your plan. When you cancel your plan you are giving up the phone number. You can transfer your phone number to a different carrier, but to do that you have to have the original account active when you initiate the number transfer. The process of transferring the number closes the original account.

    135. Re:BooHoo by Sandbags · · Score: 1

      IT'S a $600 PHONE! YOU'RE GETTING IT FOR $399! SFTU!

      Even with other devices, to get a $100 discount you have to go 2 years ("new every 2" or whatever they call it). Here you;ve been in 1 year, got a $400 discount on the original device, and can now get a $200 on the newest model.

      This is not a friggin $200 camera flip phone, this is a phone, iPod, PSP, micro-netbook, touchscreen video-cameraphone (in 480p I might add, better than most cheap hand cameras), where the software costs $0-10, not $15-40 per application, and you have access to 50,000 apps!!!!

      STOP thinking about this ias a $200 device. START thinking about it as a $600 device.

      Look at the Blackberry Storm from Verizon. $499 ($199 with 2 year contract). Nowhere NEAR as feature complete as the iPhone 3G, slower, barely plays games, and all the software (the about 200 apps), cost many times what the iPhone apps cost. On top of that, the 450 minute plan is $30 MORE EXPENSIVE than AT&T's plan. Songs cost $3 not $0.99 The unlimited plan is $20 more per month... Got a less than 1 year old blackberry? You can get a new Storm, but only at $100 off, or you have to rescind your original subsidized fee before getting the Storm. This also is a WORSE deal than upgrading an iPhone that "doesn't qualify".

      --
      There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
    136. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to agree. I'm not a cell phone guru by any measure, but only offering the discount rate every two years seems to be a fairly standard term in my experience.

      I say let them have the upgrade early but add 2 years on their contracts. So if they had a year left, they can have the new iPhone but they'll then have 3 years left of contract. Kind of makes sense no?

    137. Re:BooHoo by Scyber · · Score: 1

      You can do it, but you might lose your number. The issue is that once your account is closed, if the number hasn't already been ported, it is no longer yours, it is lost. Typically with number ports in the US, you sign up with a new company and request that your number is ported. You are never supposed to cancel your old contract until the number is successfully ported. Once the number is ported, then you can cancel the old account. In theory if you could open up a second account with the same provider, you might be able to port the number, then cancel the first account. But it depends on whether they will allow you to sign up to a new account.

    138. Re:BooHoo by Sandbags · · Score: 1

      You get a $400 discount for signing a 2 year contract on an iPhone.
      You can get a 0 year plan by saccrificing the discount entirely.
      You get a $200 discount if you're already a iPhone user ($400 if your current iPhone is an Edge model). You only need to renew for 2 years, not extend by 2 years.
      You can get a "1 year" contract by canceling after 1 year, and paying the ETF and giving them BACK half of the original subsidy ($200), so a 1 year plan costs $85 more than a 2 year plan.

      Since a "1 year" plan has the same monthly price as a 2 year contract, and you refund the subsidy prorated, basically, instead of charging you more per month (like they used to do for shorter plans), they're simply charging you an extra $85.

      However, in the USA, a iPhone is no more than an iPod with a phone on anyone else's network, and won't work at 3G speeds... Why bother? Visual Voicemail doesn't work, push notifications don't work, SMS and MMS don't work, 3G doesn't work, what's it good for off their network? Buy a iPod touch instead if you don't like AT&T.

      --
      There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
    139. Re:BooHoo by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      My kyocera phone cost me $40CDN(about 25 Euros) with 40 dollars of talk time. It's got bluetooth. I'm quite happy about that, because right after I bought my phone, I bought a new Ford Focus, and it can link with my phone.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    140. Re:BooHoo by _Hiro_ · · Score: 1

      Are you sure?

      T-Mobile has 3G, but only in a few markets, so it won't work for most users just because it's not available. (Twin Cities, Atlanta, Decatur, Chicago, etc.)

      --
      -Pope Peter Porker, S.O.W., K.M.K.R., U.G.O.A., F.S.G.S.D.
    141. Re:BooHoo by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Presumably you have a locked phone that you can't take to another carrier.

    142. Re:BooHoo by mysidia · · Score: 1

      ATT is most likely not going to tell you no when you ask to buy a new contract from them. They want your money.

      As for porting the number when your new carrier requests it -- that's not a "polite request" that ATT has the right to refuse; by federal regulation, they must honor a valid port request.

      So even if you can't get a new ATT contract, you still keep your phone number.

    143. Re:BooHoo by CubicleView · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree, you know you've spent too much on the phone if you're more concerned about the car having crushed your phone than anything else in the proximity to your pocket... That being said, shiny things do not last forever, they wear out and or become obsolete quite quickly. Generally speaking you get better value for money with last generation technology, ie stuff that was new last year. But if you want new stuff as it becomes available then you pay the premium. This has always been the case and is not news imo.

    144. Re:BooHoo by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Or you could boycott the particularly onerous terms of your contract by paying your ETF and not giving AT&T your money any longer.

      Giving them extra money so that they no longer have to provide service to you? Yeah, that'll learn 'em.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    145. Re:BooHoo by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Or, you can keep your existing account, buy a new $99 iPhone for your make-believe spouse (this is slashdot, right) and add it to your existing plan for a little more (I previously posted $15 a month more, but I think it's more like $30 for the family plan). When your original plan dies, depending on how many months you had to pay "family plan" for two phones, simply go back to a single plan for the new phone, and donate your old iPhone. Who knows, since you'll be sporting a new shiny iPhone, you might actually land a spouse before it expires so then you can keep both.

    146. Re:BooHoo by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. Besides, early adopters always get the shaft. That's the price you pay for being an early adopter.

      If this is true (and I believe it to be) then nobody is really getting the shaft. If that's the price to pay, and they are willingly paying it, then they WANT the shaft. I know because I took the $699 shaft on August 10th, 2007.

    147. Re:BooHoo by mysidia · · Score: 1

      What? And you actually believe those documents at face value?

      Ha ha ha...

    148. Re:BooHoo by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      It's about time somebody else chimed in about the "family plan" option of getting a new phone at the subsidized prices!

    149. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a lot of dumbphones out there with Bluetooth.

    150. Re:BooHoo by Mattazuma · · Score: 1

      T-Mobile in the US appears to be using 1700 and 2100. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-Mobile_USA_3G

    151. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I screwed myself and I did it willingly

      I would expect nothing less from a ScrewMaster.

    152. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Get job directing dump trucks full of gold coins.
      2. ???
      3. PROFIT!!!!

    153. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or you could do what I do, and use a pre-paid plan and not have any contract. Of course, I've kept the same phone for six or so years (Nokia 6310i), which most people don't seem to be willing to do for some reason.

    154. Re:BooHoo by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      the i7500 will eat the G2 for breakfast.

    155. Re:BooHoo by sjwaste · · Score: 1

      So do what many did when we switched to SERO from another Sprint/Nextel account -- if AT&T cannot or will not port the number to the new phone/contract, buy a cheap prepaid phone at 7-11, port the number there, cancel AT&T, then open the new contract and port the number back. Probably a $20 expense, totally worth it to keep your phone number. Gotta get creative here, folks.

    156. Re:BooHoo by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Sacrilege! Next thing you'll be telling us that the original xbox controller was too big!

      --
      It's been a long time.
    157. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      never rely on your cell phone nor trust your provider

    158. Re:BooHoo by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Or maybe the standard customer has a much higher profit margin than 10%, and that number is brought down by corporate rates with a lower margin?

      --
      It's been a long time.
    159. Re:BooHoo by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      Yup, although if I recall correctly, AT&T actually allows discounted upgrades quite a while before contract expiration. I think I became eligible for a new phone after only a year or so.

      I just checked my account - I am definately eligible for an upgrade now, 4 months short of the 2-year mark, and I'm 90% certain I've been eligible for a while.

      iPhone users - QQ more, this is standard policy with every cell phone carrier in the United States for ANY phone, and in fact AT&T's upgrade policy is MUCH better than Verizon's (once a year or so as opposed to once every two).

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    160. Re:BooHoo by caladine · · Score: 1

      One thing to note about Bitpim: "BitPim is a program that allows you to view and manipulate data on many CDMA phones"

    161. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK. I absolutely hate to be "one of those guys", but come on! The plural of "sheep" is "sheep".

    162. Re:BooHoo by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 1

      just tell them you don't have one? there's a lot of people here with cell phones and no SSNs... I'd be interested in hearing how that goes though. :)

    163. Re:BooHoo by BlitzTech · · Score: 1

      Hmm. I'm not following your logic. Where's

      3.5) ???

      Oh, you mean someone actually figured out what ??? was?

    164. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh boy, I'm going to go to T-Mobile and surf on EDGE to save $20 a month.

      I'd totally do this. That's $500 over the 2 year contract. EDGE would be fine for my needs, it's the monthly expense that has kept me from getting a smartphone. The iphone looks like the one I'd get, but I can't justify the expense.

    165. Re:BooHoo by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Name some. . . I'll wait. . . .

    166. Re:BooHoo by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Check your facts. Those numbers are large but not so much compared to their revenue streams.

      Microsoft earned a lot of money last year, almost 16 billion in the fourth quarter alone. The 20 billion it has in cash then represents just over one fiscal quarter of revenues.

      That's not exactly "weathering a recession" kind of money.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    167. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This might the greatest response I have ever read on this site. I give you 10 thumbs up!

      If I wasn't at work I'd log in and if I had a plethora of Karma it would all be yours.

    168. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly--and it's Apple so there's nothing new there anyway. People that are not normally Apple fanboys/girls but wanted an iPhone oh-so-badly, welcome to Apple :) Although, yes, any cell service is like this as far as the contracts/upgrades. One reason you can choose to buy and unlocked phone from eBay or wherever and go month-to-month.

    169. Re:BooHoo by sidb · · Score: 1

      False. From the first sentence in your own link: "...in many CDMA phones from LG, Samsung, Sanyo and other manufacturers." Not all BT phones: only some, and not the iPhone.

    170. Re:BooHoo by ford42 · · Score: 1

      And by those documents, the wireless "segment" of AT&T brought in a 28.6% profit margin for 2009 Q1. Just to spell it out for people too lazy to click through.

    171. Re:BooHoo by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      T-Mo is using a different frequency band (1700 MHz) for 3G than AT&T does.

      Very few phones available in the US support the 1700 MHz band, as I believe Japan and Korea are the only other countries to use 1700 MHz UMTS. Nearly everyone else outside of the US operates UMTS in the 2100 MHz band.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    172. Re:BooHoo by Cornelius+the+Great · · Score: 1

      The iPhone 3GS has the same 480x320 resolution as the previous iPhones and iTouches.

      --
      Sigs are for losers
    173. Re:BooHoo by Cornelius+the+Great · · Score: 1

      By adding additional lines?

      --
      Sigs are for losers
    174. Re:BooHoo by hansonc · · Score: 1

      Buy a $20 prepaid T-mobile phone at Walmart.
      Port your AT&T number to it
      Pay the ETF to AT&T
      Open new AT&T Account
      Port number from T-Mobile.
      Save the T-mobile phone in a drawer
      Wait for iPhone 3gs+ in 2010
      lather, rinse, repeat.

    175. Re:BooHoo by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      I don't care how long the contract is. Being forced to use Rogers is a fate worse than death.

      I'd tell you why, but I'm about 6 hours from the nearest service area.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    176. Re:BooHoo by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Yes. As an existing iPhone customer, I can buy another iPhone at the $99 rate, and give it to "my wife". You have to convert your account to a family plan, but depending on how much time is left on your current contract, it may be worth it to pay the extra monthly fee for a family plan, versus paying the upgrade price. Once your first phone's individual contract expires, ditch the family plan, and go back to an individual plan on your newer, $99 iPhone. I've done this once already, and depending on how compelling the new phone is, I might be doing it again.

    177. Re:BooHoo by milkmage · · Score: 1

      shiny and new is one thing, but there are features in 3.0 (such as voice dialing) that REQUIRE the faster processor in the 3GS.

      this is just another example of the business model failing to keep up with the technology.

      hardware refresh on an annual cycle, and a 2 year contract makes NO sense for devices that are more computers than phones (that goes for all devices in the "smart phone" class - not just iphones)

    178. Re:BooHoo by Forge · · Score: 1

      Wise words.

      Although, in the few cases I know of where a phone was crushed by a car, it fell on the ground 1st so all bones and genitals were a safe distance from those destructive tires.

      --
      --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
    179. Re:BooHoo by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 1

      What is it about a some iPhone users that makes them think that the general rule of lending and new product pricing doesn't apply to them? When a new product comes out, its costs more.

      I'd suggest that perhaps the most vociferous iPhone users decrying this contract-influenced pricing structure are also die-hard Macophiles, and lead you to draw our own conclusions about why the latest and greatest seems mandatory to them. (*cough* fanboys *cough*)

    180. Re:BooHoo by Dzimas · · Score: 1

      I bought my current phone (a Blackberry) unlocked from an online discount retailer. It cost me under $200 and I have the freedom to upgrade or my change service provider whenever the urge hits. Of course, this strategy doesn't work so well when you're chasing the latest handset because it'll cost you an arm and a leg. Personally, it's all about the freedom to change my mind. I'm hoping that Android really catches on in the next year or so - if it does, I might jump to that platform. Either way, I have the freedom to do it without having to pay onerous penalties.

    181. Re:BooHoo by mcvos · · Score: 1

      As for myself, I have never bought a cellphone costing more than 2X the absolute cheapest phone on the local market. But, that's just because I am not rich.

      I got my previous phone for free with a free subscription. (I still don't know how they planned to make money from me. When they got annoying, I switched to a $5/month sim only subscription.)

      My current phone is an iPhone.

    182. Re:BooHoo by rxan · · Score: 1

      I'll have to side with the customers.

      The problem is that customers have to pay full price for the new phone, yet they still remain on contract. Some correct options are possible:

      • Renew contract for 2 years, pay subsidized cost, and trade in the iPhone 3G for the 3GS.
      • Pay unsubsidized cost for a 3GS. Thus the customer keeps the 3G (still on contract) and gets a 3GS (contractless).

      I can understand not just letting customers pay the subsidized cost for the 3GS and remain on the same contract. But not letting customers renew their contracts for another 2 years in order to pay the subsidized cost for the 3GS is a bastard move no matter how you look at it.

    183. Re:BooHoo by rxan · · Score: 1

      You people always make me laugh.

      "I'll go ahead and boycott (insert service provider) because I don't believe in their terms. I'll just go with (insert other service provider) because I like their terms. Oh wait, all service providers have equally horrible terms. I only have one other option left -- not get a phone! Oh joy!"

      You have to realize that while customers have choices, all choices are awful.

      If you want to just lay there and take it, that's your prerogative, but kindly have the decency to shut the fuck up about how you're not receiving a perceived fair bargain from the entity you willfully signed your custom away to.

      Thank you, but I won't "shut the fuck up" until I have a choice that's reasonable. Customers have a right to complain and your bitching won't take that away from them.

    184. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The comment about AT&Ts insanely high profit margin was with regard to their cellular services, not the company as a whole. Also, things like R&D and advertising make the margin seem smaller on paper, even thou they don't contribute directly to bringing you service. And wouldn't even want to imagine what they pay to their executive team.

    185. Re:BooHoo by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      Sometimes I wonder how you spend $100 billion in one year. Where can you go and say "I have $100 billion to spend"?

      Bank of America.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    186. Re:BooHoo by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      The difference between spending large sums of money on a phone and spending large sums of money for a contract is that the contract is spread out over a period of time, whereas the phone is all up front.

    187. Re:BooHoo by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      As for myself, I have never bought a cellphone costing more than 2X the absolute cheapest phone on the local market. But, that's just because I am not rich.

      So 2x $0 = 0? (since you can always find a contract w/ a free phone) Why not just say $0?

      You really think that $0 is a "free phone"? Those two year contracts are not cheap.

    188. Re:BooHoo by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      So 2x $0 = 0? (since you can always find a contract w/ a free phone) Why not just say $0?

      That two year contract that you just signed to get it means your "free" phone is anything but.

    189. Re:BooHoo by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1

      But if you crashed your new Ford Focus, would you be upset over the loss of the instrument itself? If so, then you paid too much.

      Here is a general rule of thumb: If your car is crushed in an accident 15 minutes after your last upgrade purchase and those upgrades are safe, you should only be upset over the inconvenience of not being able to drive for a few hours and having to move your custom Pokemon steering wheel cover and floor mats to the new vehicle. If the loss of the vehicle itself is a cause for concern, you paid too much.

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    190. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or you could boycott the particularly onerous terms of your contract by paying your ETF and not giving AT&T your money any longer. You and I both know it doesn't cost them even remotely close to 95$ a month for your service - their profit margins are obscene. It's absolutely their right to request you pay that amount each month, and if you were suckered into a contract, that's a blow to you. Learn by your mistake by terminating the contract in the legal manner (and if that means waiting until they change the terms of the contract, so be it) and don't fucking enter another one like it again. Until you tell them you're not interesting in paying obscene costs or entering into their service with any contract (even forgoing your precious ball and chain for a while), they'll keep bending you over and blasting your asshole repeatedly. If you want to just lay there and take it, that's your prerogative, but kindly have the decency to shut the fuck up about how you're not receiving a perceived fair bargain from the entity you willfully signed your custom away to.

      I'm cancelling my AT&T contract.

      They're bastards.

      I'll not sign another contract with those bastards.

      AT&T and Apple are penalizing loyal customers.

      And get this, it's $699 to purchase a 32 GB 3GS--not $499. (It depends where you are in your contract.)

      I just called Apple's Customer's Relations and registered a complaint.

      Yes, I signed a contract. And I can cancel that contract. And I can complain to others about AT&T's treatment of me. And I can influence those folks. And AT&T and Apple will lose revenue.

      Apple pissed off its base yesterday at the keynote--by communicating one price ($299) and then letting those same loyal customers (Apple's base customers--never piss off your base) discover that the phone would really be $699. Geez.

      Can you say "blackberry" or "Pre"? Here I come. Anything but AT&T.

      Hell. I got rid of AT&T at my business and in my home. Use Comcast digital. Works great. Screw AT&T.

    191. Re:BooHoo by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1

      things like R&D and advertising make the margin seem smaller on paper, even thou they don't contribute directly to bringing you service.

      How does R&D not contribute to bringing you service? Without R&D there would be no cell phones, and without cell phones, there would be no service.

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    192. Re:BooHoo by coaxial · · Score: 1

      AT&T is heavily investing into their infrastructure as the market continues to demand more.

      Bull. Shit. This is the same crap that AT&T and all the other telcos spout, but at the same time, the US still has one of the worst cell systems in the industrialized world. We still have one of the worst deployment of high speed Internet connectivity. And don't even try that "but the population is denser there" argument. You only have to wire up where the people live. No one is asking you to wire up Denali.

    193. Re:BooHoo by brokenhorse · · Score: 1

      People should just suck it up and fulfill their contract before upgrading. By the time their contract runs out, a 4th gen iphone will be out. Even better! A blessing in disguise.

    194. Re:BooHoo by 2short · · Score: 1


      While I'm sympathetic to your cause, and don't expect to ever be buying one either...

      You appear to be waiting for a legal agreement to make a technologically different product will have the same properties. It's not going to happen.

      Personally, if I don't care about having a hardback that looks nice on the shelf, I can make some judgment about the likelihood of getting my moneys worth before Amazon goes under. An ebook, particularly one infected with DRM idiocy, is not the same as a paper book. It has upsides and downsides, and some of the downsides are stupid and unnecessary from my point of view. But I don't always care.

    195. Re:BooHoo by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Ilimitado: redução de velocidade ao atingir 2GB de dados trafegados.

      AT&T is offering _unlimited_ meaning no cap for US$35.

      According to that quote, the 2GB is not a cap, it's a point where speed can be reduced: "redução de velocidade ao atingir 2GB de dados trafegados" roughly translated means (if my guess is correct) "reduced velocity after 2GB of data traffic"

      Is AT&T truly unlimited 3G or do they do this as well? I have an ADP1 with T-Mobile and I know that T-Mobile reserves the right (but does not always exercise the right) to limit bandwidth after "excessive" use.

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    196. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technology this good is not free. Anyone who thinks otherwise is an idiot. You are trying to get something for nothing, and go back on a contract. Stupid, short-sighted behavior like this is the reason we are in this economic downturn.

      The world does not owe you anything. Why don't you *work* for something, or *pay* for something, instead of complaining and trying to get everything for free.

    197. Re:BooHoo by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1

      I worked at QuikTrip for a few years and i can attest to this. There were even some days that we LOST a couple cents per gallon on gas simply because the station across the street was still using gas they purchased weeks before and could afford the lower price. This was when prices were rising and because we had to refill our fuel tanks more often (we were busier than "the other guys"), the gas we were selling was actually more expensive than the gas they were selling. But we made up for that with selling fountain drinks inside which have a huge profit margin. It was the middle of the summer in Arizona, so we sold a LOT of drinks.

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    198. Re:BooHoo by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "just tell them you don't have one? there's a lot of people here with cell phones and no SSNs... I'd be interested in hearing how that goes though. :)"

      Well, I've been looking around ATT's site and may have found a way around it. Doing a business phone....they just need a EIN, which I do have and is for business purposes...so I may go that route.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    199. Re:BooHoo by theraz0r · · Score: 1

      Wow, how far off base are you? Actually after the subsidization of most handsets, carriers aren't profitable on an average customer until the 10th month. That was why originally most carriers had 1 year contracts. With the customer churn and the costs associated with new customer acquisition it was very hard for carriers to grow financially. The problem in the US is that the mobile phone industry started offering free or subsidized handsets with service and people became accustomed to it and have a sense of entitlement. What other industry does this? Do you expect a free or subsidized TV from Comcast when you sign up for service? Seriously, people need to get off the entitlement trip and stop the whining. Pay one way or another, either up front for the full cost of the phone or monthly by being bound to a contract.

    200. Re:BooHoo by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      My other vehicle cost me 500 dollars. I'd be upset over the loss of that vehicle if I crashed it. By your metric, this means I paid too much. Your metric, therefore, isn't reasonable.

      What does any of this have to do with cell phones?

      --
      It's been a long time.
    201. Re:BooHoo by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1

      It was a joke. See this post.

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    202. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually an early adopter would have gotten the original iPhone 2 years ago - and have no problems with an upgrade.

    203. Re:BooHoo by torkus · · Score: 1

      Really? In a thread about the iPhone?

      AT&T most certainly did NOT design the iPhone. AT&T does not design Nokia's. AT&T does not design Moto's. Are you catching the theme here?

      Most cell phones are not designed in-house by carriers.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
    204. Re:BooHoo by hazydave · · Score: 1

      There are a number of smaller phone companies in the USA pursuing the same model -- basic phone service, prepaid or at least contract-free with unlimited calling (but big roving fees, since they don't have national coverage)... kind of revolting against the constant upscaling of the cost of cell phones. An iPhone would cost me more per month than driving my car... that should say something about how crazy these $80-$100 per month fees have become.

      Most pre-paids in the USA expire in 3 months or so, but you could still keep a phone for a year for about $40, plus the cost of the phone. Of course, here, some carriers charge for received calls too, so you'd have to evaluate that.

      And none of that gets you any of the cool smart phone stuff.

      --
      -Dave Haynie
    205. Re:BooHoo by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Ok, maybe cell phones wasn't the best example, but apply the same concept to whatever it is that AT&T DOES do R&D on... cellular technology? 3G systems? No matter how you try to slice it, you DO benefit from their R&D. If you didn't there would be no point in them even doing it, as it wouldn't bring them any benefit either.

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    206. Re:BooHoo by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Ah, I see.

      For the record, I was rather upset about losing my last phone a 40 dollar piece of crap from China. It didn't have the Internet. It didn't have a camera. It didn't have ringtones.

      I loved that phone. It did exactly what I wanted it to. It even had a great alarm clock that'd ring until I did something about it(Unlike my current phone that rings exactly once). I don't care what the cost was, I'm sad it's gone.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    207. Re:BooHoo by hazydave · · Score: 1

      Some of the carriers do this at the 1.5 year point, just to ensure you're not going to jump ship to another carrier. But of course, this isn't going to really help the die-hard iPhone weenie. Sure, if they're at 1.5 years now, and AT&T would let them jump to a 2.5 year contract and the new phone, great. But what about next June, when they introduce the 64GB iPhone 4 with the OLED screen they should have had now (how you can introduce a high-end PDA, SmartPhone, or PMP without OLED these days is beyond me... but I guess Apple, like its customers, lives in a slightly different world). They'll still have 1.5 years on the contract, and they'll be raising the same fuss and whine they're raising today.

      The real answer is, if you can't cope with your high-tech item being replaced in the market way too soon (mine's still NEW!!!), you shouldn't be buying high-tech items. This isn't a "maybe", it is absolutely guaranteed to happen.

      --
      -Dave Haynie
    208. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For a "normal" company... you'd be perfectly correct. Problem is - you're dealing with Apple fans here... those people are crazy (I know... I am one!). We expect Jobs to treat us well... so when we can't get his newest shiny creation as cheap as everyone else... especially just because we supported him a few years ago with its initial release... well, you can see why we'd be hurt.

      Frankly though, this should come as no surprise to Apple fans... historically, Apple has treated it's first-adapters very poorly... (look at the original iMac and iPod for good examples of this). I love Apple... but I very rarely buy first generation from them... and when I do, I know I'm going to be paying through the nose for it throughout its lifespan.

    209. Re:BooHoo by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1

      I totally agree. I think that the post I was making fun of was totally bogus. Anything I spend money on matters to me. I spent time making my money, and I don't want to shell out more for a new phone no matter how much it costs. Even if it was a free warranty replacement, I wouldn't be happy at all that a phone broke. I had about 10 free replacements in the period of about a year due to Motorola's crappy quality phones (and maybe a little due to my clumsiness, but I never had a problem with non-Moto phones) so I can attest to how much that sucks. It's not only going without being able to call people, it's having to explain to people that they have to call you at a different number and all the lost messages in the meantime.

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    210. Re:BooHoo by hazydave · · Score: 1

      They're doing their 3G (eg, UMTS/HSDPA) at 850MHz, 1900MHz, and 2100 MHz, with voice doing 900MHz and 1800MHz as well, for full international voice support.

      --
      -Dave Haynie
    211. Re:BooHoo by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      We've got a few prepaid players in Canada.

      It's win-win. Phone companies sell to customers they wouldn't otherwise be able to sell to and get to charge more per-call, customers get extreme flexibility.

      I bought my last phone for 40 dollars, and it came with 40 dollars of talk time. Afterwards, it costs $15/mo keeping it stocked with time. For long distance or long duration calls, I've got my $30/yr skype subscription.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    212. Re:BooHoo by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Something just seems wrong about the celebration of raw materialism in our previous posts. :)

      --
      It's been a long time.
    213. Re:BooHoo by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Haha... Well in my (and possibly your) defense, it's not the money or the object that I would be upset losing. It's the time I spent making the money to buy the object. Time I could better spend with family or friends rather than at work.

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    214. Re:BooHoo by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Time I could better spend with family or friends or on slashdot rather than at work.

      Fixed. ;)

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    215. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Foiled again! And we would've gotten away with it if it weren't for you damn kids!

    216. Re:BooHoo by torkus · · Score: 1

      My CPU has more level 2 cache than the first hard-drive based computer I owned. 12MB vs. 10MB Heck, level 1 cache is near/at the system RAM of my first computer - C64.

      Yes, we've come multiple orders of magnitude from back then. Sadly things aren't really much faster. The quality may have gone up (1080p streaming is NICE) but not nearly to the same degree as the hardware. 320x240 video vs. 1980x1080 is roughly a 50-fold increase. CPU and disk have seen easily a 1000-fold increase. Sad how inefficient everything else has gotten.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
    217. Re:BooHoo by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      Are you sure about it? I was under the impression that many (simpler) phones are unlocked by punching in a code on the keypad.

    218. Re:BooHoo by torkus · · Score: 1

      Odd.

      I have better. Today.

      I've already got 'Books purchased from us can be downloaded any time, multiple times, all in multiple non-proprietary AND proprietary formats, with support for future formats free of charge, and AND *AND* we welcome you to freely share these books with your friends*.

      *(you knew there was a catch, right?) - You may distribute these copyrighted works freely provided you do not charge for them. (See, killed it for yo...wait. what? Really...that's it?)

      www.baen.com

      www.webscription.net

      Yes, it's a limited selection. Strangely though I buy books from them instead of finding them on P2P even though it would be *legal* to get them from there. Even more strangely, no one rushes to take the new books off there and put them on P2P.

      I would buy far more e-books if other companies had the same policy. It's nice being able to hit the website from work and grab the RTF or HTML version of a book i'm reading if i forget my reader at home that day.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
    219. Re:BooHoo by Patch86 · · Score: 1

      I agree. My last non-iPhone mobile phone seemed to be about the same in terms of upgrade terms, and I imagine all phones are the same.

      My last phone was on a 12 month contract. At the end of each 12 month period, they'd offer me a discounted upgrade to a new handset (the discount would have been bigger if I were on a longer contract than 12 months) or various other incentives if I chose not to upgrade. If I had wanted a new handset before the end of my contract and without signing up to a new contract (essentially AT&T's requirement to receive their "new customer discount") I would have has to pay top whack.

      Whining that a company won't give you a discount despite the fact they never ever promised to- my loathing for Apple fanatics is climbing to interesting new levels.

    220. Re:BooHoo by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but in the end it's still spending 250 Euros on a contract vs. spending 60 Euros on a phone, a prepaid card and a recharge. Losses don't simply disappear just because I spread them out.

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
    221. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      3.5 cut the prices on the low end market so the e-bay factor can't reduce sells.

    222. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that they will and do.

    223. Re:BooHoo by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      I worked at a place once where we got to buy stuff at cost - 10%. I got a TV and an LCD Projector while I was there.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    224. Re:BooHoo by rsborg · · Score: 1

      You do have to wait 90 days to open a new account with them.

      This is what family members are useful for (other than for all that mushy emotional support stuff).

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    225. Re:BooHoo by code4fun · · Score: 1

      You and I both know it doesn't cost them even remotely close to 95$ a month for your service - their profit margins are obscene.

      I would have to agree. I'm still on my original 1st gen phone. I resisted the urge to upgrade due to the increase in monthly (recurring) fees for the 3G phone. When the iPhone 3G came out, a lot of the users who upgraded didn't seem to mind the added service charge for the new 3G phone. With the economy downturn, I imagine a lot of them feeling the hurt and this added upgrade restriction for the latest model just makes it even worse for them.

      I use my phone for making calls when I don't have access to a real phone line. Being able to access the net is a convenience, but I can't justify paying the added service charge. Furthermore, since I barely use the cell phone as it is, I end up rolling over my unused minutes. I have a bunch of accumulated minutes that basically expire. So, I'm certainly not getting my money's worth paying the lower EDGE monthly plan as it is. Most of the time I have access to a wifi network so I can access the net without using ATT's data network.

      Although I qualify for the discount upgrade, that's not enough for me to upgrade the phone. I'm still looking for a lower cost plan. I imagine a lot of iPhone users that are feeling the hurt of the recurring cost will finally realize this.

    226. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is all this Full Disclosure stuff on /. Like you're in some high-powered, well-known position that we all have to be aware of.

      Full Disclosure: So?

    227. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there is nothing genius about this. you all sound like idiots. its not just the iphone that has that policy, EVERY CELL PHONE COMPANY has this policy! I'll use every company as an example: if you purchased the new Samsung Instinct ( sprint ) the blackberry storm (verizon) a new sidekick (tmobile) or the iphone in January, and a new version drops this summer, YOU WILL STILL HAVE TO PAY MORE TO GET THE PHONE! why are so many people bitching about the iphone. This is standard policy with Cell Carriers in the US. Get over it.

    228. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Either pay the higher price for the upgrade or live through the horror of not having the latest shiny product until your contract runs out.

      I find it funny that someone who is paying $2300 for two years of phone service would flinch at paying an extra $200 for a phone upgrade.

    229. Re:BooHoo by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      OK. I absolutely hate to be "one of those guys", but come on! The plural of "sheep" is "sheep".

      Oh yeah? And I suppose you think the plural of "fish" is "fish".

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    230. Re:BooHoo by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      I'm terrified of the day I realize I'm counting memory in gigs the same way I count in megs (64 128 256 512 1024 range).

      For me (and many others, I'm sure), that day is here. My Performa 400 had 4 megs of RAM. My Macbook Pro has 4 gigs of RAM...

      Ha ... my Apple ][ Standard came with 16 kilobytes of RAM. My hard disk has a thousand times more memory.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    231. Re:BooHoo by XLR8DST8 · · Score: 0

      people with 3G phones aren't early adopters. the 3G was the second generation & the first generation had been out a year. also, just because apple comes out with a new phone every year, while the contract is for 2 years, that is not 'getting the shaft'. for one, anyone who got the phone agreed to sign up for 2 years, and they were getting that specific phone. just because a new phone is out, that doesn't mean the old phone works any worse than it did the day before the new phone came out.

      as a matter of fact, the 3G will only GAIN features when the 3G S comes out, as the new OS 3.0 will come out as well, being installable on the regular 3G.

      furthermore, not much has changed. ok, capacity, the camera, and the processor speed. some people don't use all the capacity of the storage anyways. or the camera. and processor speed, honestly i think is negligible. i'll still be happy with my 3G.

      hell, it can be argued that my 3G will do more than some 3G S's, as i have mine jailbroken, and can tether it via Netshare. and pay nothing extra for that feature, to apple, nor to AT&T.

    232. Re:BooHoo by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 1

      You could run twm and lynx if you really wanted to. But if you want graphics and you want javascript and you want flash, you need to give up "efficiency." It makes no market sense to spend billions of dollars making processors thousands of times more powerful and then not use it. The point of powerful processors is to be able to do more, not to see your load approach .01.

      You're right though; things are less efficient, but only because there's plenty of spare power and efficiency is very expensive and impossible for some large projects (at least with human programmers).

    233. Re:BooHoo by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 1

      You might want to rethink your order of magnitude there.. your hard disk probably has like 16 million ish times more capacity.

    234. Re:BooHoo by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 1

      What are you going on about? You can download books from Project Gutenberg (or p2p or whatever) and Amazon will transfer them to your kindle for free over the cell connection. They give you an email address @amazon.com or something and you just attach your ebooks to an email.

    235. Re:BooHoo by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      You might want to rethink your order of magnitude there.. your hard disk probably has like 16 million ish times more capacity.

      That's why I said "memory" not "storage". The WD in my desktop machine here has 16 Mb. of on-board cache.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    236. Re:BooHoo by jonfr · · Score: 1

      So, Apple new 3G phone is three band ? This bads are used commonly in that case 850/1900/2100. There already are Nokia phones that are two and thee band 3G, 900/2100 (Europe), 850/1900 or 850/1900/2100 (U.S), or 900/1900/2100 (Europe).

      There are not many 3G phones with 3G 1700 support yet. I am not sure why that is.

    237. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot. everyone knew that new iPhones were going to be released this summer. All you had to do was a little research - appleinsider.com, gizmodo.com, engadget.com etc and you wouldn't be crying now. Its your own fault that you got screwed. I actually laugh every time I read a story like yours.

    238. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention ATT is at the forefront of trying to destroy net neutrality. that's the reason I don't have an iPhone (I have an iTouch). You have to learn to endure the cost of putting your money where your mouth is. I use credo (www.credo.com) (no relationship with me BTW) because they give 10% of their profits to liberal causes. Now that's a change from overthrowing governments and installing dictatorships ... oh wait.. that was ITT... before it became ATT...

    239. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, and if it wasn't a practice all those Apple fanboys would have had to pay full price for their current phone to begin with. AT&T would certainly still be paying off your discounted purchase with each month you have their service - maybe they should just make you buy the hardware and then pay month to month for their service rather than give a discount.

      It's the same in Canada and elsewhere and cellular providers are trying to avoid the 'race to zero' where discounts on hardware, rate plans and features all get cheaper and cheaper until they not only don't make money for the company, but cost nothing to consumers. Combine that with goodwill credits that some companies do to keep clients rather than lose them (not to mention the support cost each time someone phones for suppor on 'how do I play this game from Apple's store') and AT&T is well within their rights.

    240. Re:BooHoo by tonejava · · Score: 1

      1) Apple culture heavily weighted towards having latest shiny object

      Well I'm not sure it's just the Apple culture. I for one like my shiny new objects whether they be Apple, Nintendo, Microsoft or.... hmmm... nope thats it. :)

    241. Re:BooHoo by Kelsen · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that that is just the sort of 'loyalty'/fanaticism the phone companies want to engender; I think they should do just this - allow you to upgrade phones, while adding the time to your existing contract - with some sort of delimiter at the upper end, i.e. if the upgrade takes your commitment past 60 months, no go.

      I'm sure you get this a lot, Dave, but I too am curious. Are you the Amiga guy?


      RFT!!!
      Dave Kelsen
      --
      All men are frauds. The only difference between them is that some admit it. I myself deny it.

    242. Re:BooHoo by wumingzi · · Score: 1

      AT&T has a profit margin of 10%. If you think that is insanely high... I'd rather not be in business with you.

      While I don't think AT&T releases profits by divisions of the company, I am writing from inside of one of those sections and don't think I'm giving away any big secrets by telling an illustrating factoid.

      Much of the "bulk" of AT&T is the landline business. This is a high-cost, low margin business which is being eaten away at by VOIP, cable companies, attrition to mobile solutions, etc. Another poster asked about how to spend 100 billion dollars. Payroll for 300,000 employees is one way. Rooms full of expensive equipment is another.

      There is a much smaller segment of the company involved in mobility solutions (cell phones/HSDPA/etc.) That divison of the company is quite profitable, thank you very much.

    243. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably because Microsoft's developed expensive products but after that they just have to pay people to stick CDs in boxes and direct the incoming dump trucks full of gold coins. I'm not surprised to see such a high margin if they're in the "sit on our successful product and let it sell for awhile" phase of its operations.

      I bet any sales of product based business model will generally have a higher margin than continuous providing a servic

      WTF does Microsoft have to do with this? Jeesh. I know a lot of you here are haters but lay off the completely erroneous (http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/erroneous) comments.

    244. Re:BooHoo by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      I've been reading books from Project Gutenberg on my original Newton Messagepad for years. Obviously I'm looking for a product to which recent books will be published due to the DRM features but whose DRM understands the legal realities of my rights.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    245. Re:BooHoo by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      It's not extra money, it's the money you owe them after you entered into what amounts to a loan for the telephone you got at a lower cost.

      Arguments can indeed be made as to whether the phone even cost that much, but you still signed it. The point I was trying to make is that if you don't like it, get out of the game and don't play again. Believe me, you really, really can live without a cellphone. Seriously.

    246. Re:BooHoo by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      I wasn't bitching about your right to complain, I was bitching about your perception that it was "right" to be outraged when you entered into a contract that sucks. That's kind of like ordering a steak and complaining that there's meat in it when it gets there. It just makes you look like a fucking douche.

      And yeah, not getting a phone is fine. There's also services like Cricket available if you absolutely need a phone. And if you're going to whine about how you don't like it and the service is flaky or the phones suck, that's just you being a whining william - again your right, but petulance ill becomes an adult.

    247. Re:BooHoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now we know why they were pushing all those cheap deals on the old phone and dumping them in Japan.

  2. Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by Reality+Master+201 · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is totally out of left field. It's a good thing the US is chock-a-block with better wireless carriers and the iPhone is portable between them.

  3. never should have given the retro price cut by Lehk228 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So the issue is that a new model has been released and only people who are eligible for a new phone can get it at a discount? Apple never should have caved on the iphone price change retroactivity, now they can't improve anything without the existing users demanding free upgrades for life.

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    1. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by nine-times · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, I don't really get the complaint here. I've complained before when cell phone carriers wouldn't give me the same deal as "new customers" even after I've completed my contract-- not so much because I think that they're obligated to offer me those deals, but more because I think it's stupid and it's caused me to switch from a carrier I was otherwise happy with in order to get a better "free" phone.

      However, the $199/$299 prices for the iPhones are their subsidized prices. The real prices are $200 more, but you're essentially getting $200 cash-back for locking yourself into a t 2 year deal. If you're already in your 2 year deal, then you're not in a position to sign on for another 2 years.

    2. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why a current owner would be angry. I can save $200 now. Why not just feel happy for me instead?

    3. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by ScrewMaster · · Score: 2, Funny

      I don't understand why a current owner would be angry. I can save $200 now. Why not just feel happy for me instead?

      Mainly because iPhone owners have been known to eat their young.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    4. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 5, Funny

      iPhone owners have been known to eat their young.

      There's an app for that!

    5. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by SyncNine · · Score: 1

      FYI, while your reasoning and rationale are 100% correct and I'm in absolute agreement, you're incorrect about the numbers.

      The real price for the iPhone is as follows (for the device only, no contract, at all, period, direct from apple's store website 30 seconds ago on a non-upgrade eligible AT&T account)

      $499.00 - 8GB iPhone 3Gb
      $599.00 - 16GB iPhone 3G S
      $699.00 - 32GB iPhone 3G S

      That said, the real numbers prove your point better anyways. Just thought I'd point that out.

      --
      To the darkened skies once more, and ever onward.
    6. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by bertoelcon · · Score: 1

      But is that the real numbers, ATT wanted to charge me $299 for a nokia that was easily worth about $50, I even checked online the phone was about $100 tops. I am sure Apple and ATT are both making some profit off this at every available point.

      --
      Anything can be found funny, from a certain point of view.
    7. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iPhone owners have been known to eat their young.

      There's an app for that!

      But, it was rejected. It was too factual.

    8. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by hab136 · · Score: 1

      Apple never should have caved on the iphone price change retroactivity, now they can't improve anything without the existing users demanding free upgrades for life.

      As someone who stood in line on day one, I agree. Of *course* it's going to drop in price as time goes on. It was worth the money at the time, so I bought it. The fact that someone else can later buy it for less doesn't change the fact that I thought the original price was worth it.

      BTW I still am using that original phone. It might be finally time to upgrade - the TomTom app is actually very compelling, since I don't already have a GPS. I like the new headphones too, and it sounds like they bumped the CPU - I do a lot of browsing and a faster Safari would be awesome. The rest is nice, but not compelling for me.

    9. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by sjames · · Score: 1

      If AT&T were smart, they'd offer the full discount for either a new 2 year contract OR for a 2 year extension to a current contract.

      However, it's their prerogative to keep a stick jammed up their neither regions and needlessly make people want to leave them

    10. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Well of course Apple's making profit from the iPhone. You thought they were doing it for free? The point is that, if Apple were selling the 32GB iPhone 3GS on the open market, they'd be charging $699. If you buy it from AT&T with a 2 year contract, you get it for $299. If those numbers are right, then it means AT&T is basically paying you $400 to sign up for a 2 year contract. If you're already in a 2 year contract, what makes you think you should be allowed to sign up again for those same 2 years and get another $400?

    11. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by nine-times · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, that opens up a weird kind of situation. I could keep buying phones every month for another 2 year extension and after a few years find myself in a 100 year phone contract. From a certain perspective, that might seem like a win-win situation, because you keep getting the phones you want and AT&T gets you locked in for a lifetime. On the other hand, it's sort of a lose-lose because you're locked into a ridiculous contract, while AT&T has put out a bunch of money to buy a contract that they aren't likely to be able to collect on.

      Now I admit that's an extreme case, but the point is that AT&T has to draw the line somewhere, however arbitrary that particular location seems to you and me.

    12. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's an app for that!

      Are you kidding? There are 7 apps for that!

    13. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

      Yeah, one for each kid!

    14. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by sjames · · Score: 1

      Yes, they have to draw a line somewhere. I'm just suggesting that where they drew it wasn't the best choice. Perhaps it should be kept under 4 years commitment.

    15. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by nine-times · · Score: 1

      I guess so, but right now they're getting complaints, "I bought an iPhone last year, and now I have to wait another year before I can get AT&T to subsidize it." So if they allow these people to go for a 2-year extension, what happens next year when Apple comes out with the next version of the iPhone, or the year after that?

      People will be screaming, "WHAT?! You let me extend my contract last year, but now you're saying I can't? You're saying now I have to wait *4 YEARS* before I can upgrade again?! That's absurd! I want a new iPhone NOW!!!" The longer the extension they allow, the worse it gets.

      I mean, I don't really want to defend AT&T too much. I pretty well hate AT&T, and I wouldn't mind if they gave additional subsidies to everyone. But I'm afraid their approach seems pretty reasonably to me.

    16. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by sjames · · Score: 1

      Actually, someone with a year to go could get a new phone next year as well. Then they would need to pay full price. AT&T could say we let you get THREE subsidized phones in only three years (counting the original one), so if you just have to have another one, by all means, feel free to buy one.

      I wouldn't call it a subsidy though, it's not the goodness in their heart that causes them to do it nor even a sense of right. It is a perk that they use to bring in customers (not saying that's a bad thing, just that it isn't akin to charity).

    17. Re:never should have given the retro price cut by nine-times · · Score: 1

      A "subsidy" doesn't need to come out of the goodness of anyone's heart or a sense of "right". Hell, even government subsidies are usually the result of some kind of bribe or fear of opposing political power.

      It's a "subsidy" in the sense that AT&T is contributing toward the price of the phone, but not paying for the phone fully. So they're "subsidizing" your purchase of the phone. I don't know a more accurate term for the transaction.

  4. Or.. by Wovel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How every other carrier and every other phone works. Just because they were generous when the 3G came out, does not obligate them to do so again.

    1. Re:Or.. by SwabTheDeck · · Score: 2, Informative

      Just because they were generous when the 3G came out, does not obligate them to do so again.

      It wasn't really that they were "generous" about the 3G. It was more that the original iPhone wasn't subsidized at all. Basically, they were giving a subsidy to people who had never really received one previously. Either way, this complaint is stupid. Every other US carrier and phone manufacturer has these exact same terms. Can someone explain to me why it is that when it's Apple + AT&T, it becomes an unbearable outrage?

    2. Re:Or.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The outrage is that you pay $599 for an unsubsidized phone, and it is still locked to AT&T. If you want to make me pay the full price for the device, then don't ask me to sign another two-year contract, and don't give me a phone that's locked to AT&T.

    3. Re:Or.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sprint used to let you upgrade in mid-contract as long as you re-upped the contract. Last I checked, they at least let you get the discounted price when the contract ran out, rather than having to wait some additional time *after* the contract expired (as AT&T does).

    4. Re:Or.. by bertoelcon · · Score: 1

      Its the Apple fantrolls, and they are not fanboys because that assumes they are human and are some sort of intelligent life form.

      --
      Anything can be found funny, from a certain point of view.
    5. Re:Or.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Telco are not generous when the 3G came out.
      It is their business/marketing plan. To promote their 3G plan.
      Switching ppl from 2G phone to 3G phone thus using their (Telco) 3G plan.
      Which in turn generate more profits from their price-cut on the iPhone 3G.

    6. Re:Or.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AT&T wasn't generous, the original iPhone simply wasn't subsidized.

    7. Re:Or.. by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      Can someone explain to me why it is that when it's Apple + AT&T, it becomes an unbearable outrage?

      Because, I am sad to say, Mac users seem to be more subject to bursts outrage than normal people.

  5. iPhone Users? by sthomas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Looks like only one user was upset in that forum. The rest all saw the logic and understood what a subsidy is used for.

    1. Re:iPhone Users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Really, I just bought an iPhone in February, and will be amazed if I can get a discount beginning February 2010 or even August 2010, and I understand completely. I could sell my phone right now for $400 easy, so it wouldn't make any sense for AT&T to sell me the better version of my phone for $200.

      Stuff like this makes Slashdot look silly too, a massive jump to conclusions over a small minority shouldn't be news.

    2. Re:iPhone Users? by BronsCon · · Score: 0, Troll

      I think the real news here is that Apple fans are all whiny little twerps... except, that's not really news to those who already think so.

      Me? Just playing devil's advocate. I'm not an apple fan, by any means; but, to each, his own.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    3. Re:iPhone Users? by rsmith-mac · · Score: 1

      You'll have to excuse them, the people who are freaking out about this are all in the midst of the Five Stages of Acquisition. They've long since reached Infatuation, and are now having trouble with the Justification step. Swing a piece of gold-pressed latinum in front of their faces, and like any Ferengi they'll get over it.

    4. Re:iPhone Users? by jabberw0k · · Score: 1

      Dear Ferrari, I bought a brand new Ferrari last year and this year you have a new model available, but I'm still stuck paying for the old one! Waaah! ... what a bunch of spoilt little brats some apple users must be.

    5. Re:iPhone Users? by MyDixieWrecked · · Score: 1

      I totally understand why they do it... however what upsets me is that they treat new customers (who potentially could be really crappy customers) better than customers that have been with them for years. There's no points for loyalty with AT&T anymore; that seems to have gone out the window around the same time they originally merged with Cingular. I've got stories, but this isn't the place for that.

      Luckily I haven't purchased new hardware from AT&T in about 2 years. My first gen iPhone was given to me through work (from the boss when he upgraded to his 3G), so I qualified for reduced pricing.

      --



      ...spike
      Ewwwwww, coconut...
    6. Re:iPhone Users? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      You'll have to excuse them, the people who are freaking out about this are all in the midst of the Five Stages of Acquisition [memory-alpha.org].

      Actually, I think they're all still drooling on their bibs. Grow up people, the U.S. cell phone business is a crock, and it doesn't matter what carrier you deal with. Well, of course there's Sprint, but they're in a category all by themselves.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    7. Re:iPhone Users? by icebike · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, you can't sell your iPhone right now for $400.

      Sorry, take a look at the current prices for locked iPhones on Ebay. Falling like rocks.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    8. Re:iPhone Users? by joocemann · · Score: 1

      +5

    9. Re:iPhone Users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In replying to an Apple fan who isn't a whiny little twerp, you generalize that all Apple fans are whiny little twerps. Fail

    10. Re:iPhone Users? by cgenman · · Score: 1

      Actually, the 3G iphone was subsidised for all users, including return first generation iphone users. The reasons for this are simple: The first generation was not subsidised, and the 3G phones cost a full 15$ per month more.

    11. Re:iPhone Users? by adamchou · · Score: 1

      Looks like only one user was upset in that forum.

      overly exaggerated summary? smells like kdawson...

    12. Re:iPhone Users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In replying to the one Apple fan who isn't a whiny little twerp, you generalize that all Apple fans are whiny little twerps.

      Fixed that for you

    13. Re:iPhone Users? by ktappe · · Score: 1

      Get modded flamebait much?

      --
      "We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
    14. Re:iPhone Users? by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      Yes, and still have excellent karma. Plenty to burn, actually. What's funny about it is I was mocking those who mock apple fanbois, not mocking apple fanbois themselves; I was probably modded down by every apple fanboi on /. for it, though.

      Gotta love it.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    15. Re:iPhone Users? by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      In replying to a mockery of the anti-apple crowd, you don't understand what the term "devil's advocate" means. Fail.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    16. Re:iPhone Users? by ruiner13 · · Score: 1

      I started with an iPhone v1, and about a year later (about 14 months, really) I went into an AT&T store and was very surprised that they let me get the 3G at the lower rate. There was no haggling, they just put my number into the computer and said I qualified. So, I really think this is just a bit of sensationalist FUD being spread, and AT&T for the most part seems forgiving on the upgrade cycles. From their point of view, they secure you into a new two year contract when you do upgrade so ensure they will continue to have revenue for that much longer.

      --

      today is spelling optional day.

    17. Re:iPhone Users? by Ziwcam · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Protip: Dial *NEW# then hit send. It will tell you when you'll be eligible again.

    18. Re:iPhone Users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is one for $375 with 25 minutes left.

    19. Re:iPhone Users? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      And that's exactly why those of us who wait and buy our phones a year later enjoy the process so much.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    20. Re:iPhone Users? by daffmeister · · Score: 1

      One word: kdawson

    21. Re:iPhone Users? by Tokerat · · Score: 1

      Really, I just bought an iPhone in February, and will be amazed if I can get a discount beginning February 2010 or even August 2010, and I understand completely. I could sell my phone right now for $400 easy, so it wouldn't make any sense for AT&T to sell me the better version of my phone for $200.

      Stuff like this makes Slashdot look silly too, a massive jump to conclusions over a small minority shouldn't be news.

      Welcome to my life as a Mac fan every single time the word "Apple" is mentioned.

      --
      CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
    22. Re:iPhone Users? by Tokerat · · Score: 1

      Well, of course there's Sprint, but they're in a category all by themselves.

      I'll agree there, I used to love Sprint. People now get all excited over text messaging; I was on AIM from a cell phone in 2001, and that thing had a black-and-white liquid-crystal display (like a TI-85)! Durable, too. I got rid of them because I moved out of coverage, and I always thought my bills where a few bucks too high.

      So, I switched to AT&T (Cingular at the time), who promptly over-billed me around $1000 for what should have been a $150 three-month period (no overages). To this day they won't even try to resolve it, and it's been in collections for years now. So my credit has a black mark, and I have a Tracfone with less capabilities than my Sprint phone did back 8 years ago (except the crappy camera). They're not getting their money, though, hell with that.

      Cell service in the US IS a crock, because no one in this country (besides businesses) bothers to demand good service. See also: landline, television, music, Hollywood, ISPs, and in many ways, Government.

      *Sigh*

      --
      CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
    23. Re:iPhone Users? by Threni · · Score: 1

      > what upsets me is that they treat new customers (who potentially could be really crappy customers) better than customers that have been with them for years.

      New customers looks good on a chart. People stay with a company..people leave...meh, whatever. Perhaps they died..perhaps they saw a better deal elsewhere. People understand that.

      But new customers - that's something you can stick on a graph.

      Also, once you're a customer, you've had your perk. Want to leave and go elsewhere? Fine - do the legwork, go through the effort of porting your number over, losing phone connectivity for a few hours/day, deal with the unknown (coverage and customer service) of a new company.

    24. Re:iPhone Users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have the 16GB one and saw a few for $400 yesterday. Yes, its not the $500-600 they were at, but I'm assuming it will even out a bit after everyone whose doing a firesale to get the "new shiny" stops. Just like original iPhones were still going for $150-200 a few months ago.

    25. Re:iPhone Users? by hmar · · Score: 1

      No you weren't. Not all of us have mod points.

    26. Re:iPhone Users? by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      That's the point of contracts. Once someone is bound by one, you don't have to worry about loyalty. And if they're up for renewal and are hooked on their [locked] iphone, again you don't need to entice them- the vast majority are coming back.

    27. Re:iPhone Users? by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      <tongue href="cheek">And that's a good thing. We don't need pro-MS and pro-Linux posts being modded into oblivion.</tongue>

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    28. Re:iPhone Users? by XLR8DST8 · · Score: 0

      well of course if they sold the better version for $200 & it was more available you'd probably not be able to get $400 for your old one anymore. :-p the amount of money you can get for your phone is due to supply & demand. so if they increase supply, then you won't get as much.

    29. Re:iPhone Users? by hmar · · Score: 1

      As an Apple user myself, I think I dislike the fanbois more than Apple haters do. They give us all a bad name (Also an MS user and Linux User. Different tools for different jobs)

  6. Don't forget is it a cell phone provider by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is it different from any other phone?

  7. Pay uuuuup, shut uuuuup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pay them dammit, pay them now!

    Steve "Da Skinny Bopper" Jobs

  8. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    'We have to mount a vigorous campaign to change this policy.'

    A vigorous campaign? Really? I'm sorry, but in this context, the author simply sounds pathetic.

    1. Re:Really? by Wovel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It does seem a tad late to mount a vigorous campaign against the entire US Cell Phone Industry.... What are we wll going to do, switch to Boost?

    2. Re:Really? by snowraver1 · · Score: 1

      Pathetic? definitely. On Slashdot? Unfortunately.

      --
      Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. This comment may not be copied in any way including, but not limited to caching.
    3. Re:Really? by sthomas · · Score: 4, Funny

      "vigorous" made me laugh. For once I'd like to see someone launch a lackadaisical campaign. In fact, this is a call to arms - let's launch a lethargic campaign to create a new era of de-energized campaigns!

    4. Re:Really? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      In fact, this is a call to arms - let's launch a lethargic campaign to create a new era of de-energized campaigns!

      Too late ... Washington already beat you to it.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    5. Re:Really? by fermion · · Score: 1
      The patheticness of the post is the need for an iPhone to compensate for whatever inadequacies he or she is dealing with. I can tell you the original iPhone is plenty good. If one has the iPhone 3G it is plenty better. If somehow these two phones are inadequate, then maybe the solution it to pay the $175 to get out the contract and go to a Pre or a G1. No one is forcing anyone to buy a particular phone, or upgrade. That is a personal decision. It is like the kids how think they will die if the don't have the latest pair of Nikes.

      In closing let me make a hint. In six month Apple is going to release a new phone that will make the 3GS look like the piece of shit it is. Save yourself some grief. Suffer with the lame phone you have now until the contract runs out, then buy something not Apple. If you can't afford to upgrade your Apple toys every six months, then get out of the game.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    6. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "vigorous" made me laugh. For once I'd like to see someone launch a lackadaisical campaign. In fact, this is a call to arms - let's launch a lethargic campaign to create a new era of de-energized campaigns!

      Can we do this later?

    7. Re:Really? by znerk · · Score: 1

      "We need to hit them with a major and I mean MAJOR leaflet campaign."

      --
      This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
    8. Re:Really? by aztektum · · Score: 1

      *chirp* Would be nice to have someone else to chirp with */chirp*

      --
      :: aztek ::
      No sig for you!!
    9. Re:Really? by mog007 · · Score: 1

      Sounds kind of interesting... meh.

    10. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was going to volunteer to help, but clicking Reply To This was just too much effort.

      Screw it, I'm spent.

    11. Re:Really? by DinDaddy · · Score: 1

      OK. Can you get it going? I'm kind of tired right now.

  9. Who cares 1st thing to mind, 2nd boo-hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's standard cell carrier policy, only give discounts when your contract is either expired, or close to expired, in order to bait you into extending it.

    They make up for the *loss* (note, there is NO loss, it's just a reduced markup / profit on the phone) in their overpriced charging model, for minutes used, data transmitted, text-messages sent/received, etc.. drekcetera...

    The end of the posting says it pretty well...

  10. Stop Whining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ATT SUBSIDIZED your first phone on the basis that you would keep it for 2 years before they SUBSIDIZE another one. Just because you are a apple FANBOY does not entitle you to extra subsidies.

  11. I am incredibly upset about this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Things I'm also upset about:

    No more free lunches.
    Gas costing more than $0.05 a gallon.
    Having to walk more than three feet from my car to my local superstore.
    The fact that I wasn't born in a time where peace was on earth, everything is free, and we're all immortal.

    I'm so angry that I'm punching a wall and hoping someone will pay for its repair as we speak.

    1. Re:I am incredibly upset about this. by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Things I'm also upset about:

      No more free lunches.
      Gas costing more than $0.05 a gallon.
      Having to walk more than three feet from my car to my local superstore.
      The fact that I wasn't born in a time where peace was on earth, everything is free, and we're all immortal.

      Don't worry dude, this is all five years away.
      As is the cure for the common cold.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    2. Re:I am incredibly upset about this. by MrCrassic · · Score: 1

      Obama will fix all of this. Don't you worry.

    3. Re:I am incredibly upset about this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and the year of the linux desktop.

    4. Re:I am incredibly upset about this. by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      According to the huge banner in front of the public school down the street from me, you don't have to wait five years for a free lunch. They are available today.

    5. Re:I am incredibly upset about this. by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Things I'm also upset about:

      No more free lunches. Gas costing more than $0.05 a gallon. Having to walk more than three feet from my car to my local superstore. The fact that I wasn't born in a time where peace was on earth, everything is free, and we're all immortal.

      I'm so angry that I'm punching a wall and hoping someone will pay for its repair as we speak.

      You need to upgrade to Life2.0.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    6. Re:I am incredibly upset about this. by xenolion · · Score: 1

      LOL please someone give this guy some points that's just too funny.

  12. wat by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 0
    Not getting a discount is

    ridiculous and a slap in the face

  13. Slap in the face? WTF? by oodaloop · · Score: 2, Insightful

    AT&T and Apple are trying to get new customers by lowering the initial cost and subsidizing the remainder on a 2 yr plan. If you already have an iPhone, you don't qualify, plain and simple. Why is this a slap in the face? When did we as a society get our collective sense of entitlement?

    --
    Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    1. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When did we as a society get our collective sense of entitlement?

      It started sometime back in the mid-sixties, and it's been all downhill ever since.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by Bloopie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How does one user complaining about upgrade policies on a forum, with almost all the other users thinking the policies aren't so bad, qualify as a "collective sense of entitlement"?

    3. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by Mrbung · · Score: 1

      Right on, these people just want some shit for cheap, cause they are whiny babies.

    4. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by niteshifter · · Score: 1

      When did we as a society get our collective sense of entitlement?

      That would be 1967, aka the Summer of Love.

      Folks tell me I was there ... but I have no recollection of that event.

    5. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Yep. But I kind of feel bad for a guy at work that just got an iPhone. I told him to wait but he decided I didn't know what I was talking about so it cost him $100 or an extra 8GB of ram and some new features.
      Oh well I told him.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    6. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      When I'm paying for text messages that are ostensibly free for the carrier to send?

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    7. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by Animaether · · Score: 1

      and with a generation practically being raised on "I want it my way, I want it now, and I want it free - legal or otherwise", I think it'll drop right off the cliff at the bottom of that hill.

    8. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by ktappe · · Score: 1

      When did we as a society get our collective sense of entitlement?

      Don't you remember all those "public service" commercials in the 70's on Saturday morning teaching kids (and I quote) "The most important person in the world is you"? Somehow sociologists got it in their heads that we had a lack of self-esteem. Whether or not that was actually true, it certainly seems as if we've way overcompensated and now are stuck with a society that thinks it is due everything (music, movies, phones, software, paychecks) for free.

      --
      "We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
    9. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by mysidia · · Score: 1

      I think the main issue is the high cost of the iPhone.

      And the highly inflated cost of cellular service for the iPhone.

      The most "loyal" (whatever that means) iPhoners will find it in themselves to afford the spend of the extra few hundred $$s for ATT and Apple.

      The rest... I guess they aren't so loyal, are they?

      The sane percentage of the population will wait until the price of the product they want inevitably drops over time, to a point that it fits their budget, or until they find a superior (more appealing) choice, e.g. possibly an Android phone, or future smart phone from another company, that's as inexpensive as it is good...

    10. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have *any* phone, and have been under contract at *any* point in the past two years then you do not qualify.

      For people under contract, I wonder what you're smoking. For people no longer under contract, I wonder what AT&T is smoking.

    11. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When did we as a society get our collective sense of entitlement?

      It started sometime back in the mid-sixties, and it's been all downhill ever since.

      now there is a proper, well-trained republican knee-jerk non-response

    12. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My friend, look as sociey as a whole. This comment may be applied to this particular subject but really expresses disgust in society in general. Yes, this issue does express a percieved sense of entitlement where one should not exist. Aparently contracts mean nothing these days and businesses do themselves no favors by caving in when people complain about a contract they signed. I am no fan of these contracts but if you sign it, that's your problem.

    13. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I couldn't agree more. Damn black people trying to eat in the same restaurant as me... the nerve!

    14. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AT&T and Apple are trying to get new customers by lowering the initial cost and subsidizing the remainder on a 2 yr plan. If you already have an iPhone, you don't qualify, plain and simple. Why is this a slap in the face? When did we as a society get our collective sense of entitlement?

      One Word: OBAMA

    15. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by iluvcapra · · Score: 1

      "The most important person in the world is you" Somehow sociologists got it in their heads that we had a lack of self-esteem.

      There's an important section in Outliers where Gladwell is talking about entitlement, and how the most important thing you can teach a child is how to assert their own agency and rights. Many very intelligent people turn out failures because they lack the self-possession to speak up for themselves, question authority and take what is their right. TV ads are probably a waste of time, because most people learn entitlement by watching how their parents respond to authority.

      Obviously this can get taken to extremes, but a personal sense of entitlement is absolutely necessary for a sucessful person. It's pretty clear that the original commenter on the forum doesn't really posess any, since he's posting on an Internet forum instead of asserting his rights (insofar as he understands them) to somebody that actually cares...

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Baltar.
    16. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by 19061969 · · Score: 1

      Because it's by a "collective sense of outrage" ;-)

      --
      bang goes my karma... again...
    17. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      When did we as a society get our collective sense of entitlement?

      It started sometime back in the mid-sixties, and it's been all downhill ever since.

      now there is a proper, well-trained republican knee-jerk non-response

      No, I made an observation, having been around in the sixties, and having watched our society make some pretty stupid moves since then. YOU made a proper liberal-democrat thoughtless response, by immediately associating me with a group you find comtemptible without knowing a thing about me.

      Watch it. You make yourself look stupid when you do that, and it's a great way to make unnecessary enemies.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    18. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree more. Damn black people trying to eat in the same restaurant as me... the nerve!

      {sigh} I know you're trying to be funny, but my fiancee happens to be African-American (immigrated from West Africa) and I'm your typical white male. Trying to label me a bigot isn't a good idea. But, if you have an ounce of awareness in you, you'd grasp that America is in trouble, economically if in no other way, and we have no-one to blame but ourselves. I grew up in an era where we were the major industrial nation on the planet, bar none, where technical and scientific skills were respected, where by and large people treated each other with a little more respect (although I grant you that racial issues have improved in many respects since that time.)

      Tell you what, if you don't believe that America is becoming a nation of assholes, just take the same expressway I take to work every day. It'll change your opinion fast.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    19. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When our telecoms made deals with our Gov. to spy on us and our tax money went to propping up failed business models.

    20. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by DinDaddy · · Score: 1

      Fucking Burger King

    21. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by DannyO152 · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's not the contract, per se, but this being the third leg of the AT&T stool being pulled out from underneath yesterday. iPhone 3GS will have MMS, AT&T will be joining that party sometime later this summer. iPhone 3GS will offering bluetooth/cable tethering! A graphic of committed partners hits the screen, sardonic laughter fills the hall as everyone notices AT&T is missing and Scott Forstall moves on. New features / rectified deficiencies at a GREAT price. Well, now we know the rest of the story.

      And it's not as though AT&T has a stellar reputation for service. I have a Summer '07 iPhone which uses Edge. Last January for a week or so and last month for 19 days (!) no Edge. No explanation. No apology. No credit on my data charge.

      I like my iPhone. The iPhone 3GS is better. In mid-July, my contract ends, so I gather I can get the best pricing. I have no reason to be really upset at this. Yet, I'm right at the edge of going with another phone. Even if people vote phone over carrier. Even if enough new people come into the tent that people like me won't be missed, I suspect AT&T is setting themselves up for a massive migration when the five year exclusivity deal is up. Apple comes out with a tablet-y thing that includes telephony without AT&T exclusivity and that kills the iPhone.

    22. Re:Slap in the face? WTF? by 2obvious4u · · Score: 1

      Katrina? 9/11? Dot-com bubble?

  14. Am I missing something? by Donniedarkness · · Score: 1, Insightful
    They have a policy that says that if you're a new customer, you get a discount...

    They also have a policy that allows you to upgrade your phone at a discounted price after a certain amount of time.

    If I'm not mistaken, they've done this for a while, now... and so does Verizon. How does the iPhone have anything to do over this? Sounds to me like someone is just mad that they'll have to wait for their upgrade.

    Not saying that longtime customers shouldn't get a discount or anything... just that this shouldn't surprise anyone.

    --
    Earn a % of cash back from Newegg, Tiger Direct, Walmart.com, and more: http://www.mrrebates.com?refid=458505
    1. Re:Am I missing something? by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      I especially love how he's a 'long-time loyal iPhone customer' though, when he switched from T-mobile, 'the only reason was the iPhone'. Not even 2 and a half years on the market, which means not even a 2 and a half year customer, who received an early upgrade when the 3G came out in July of '08, less than 12 months ago. I get 18 month upgrades after 8 and a half years as an AT&T customer; you don't hear me bitching, do you? No, even though I had to wait a few extra months to get the Bold when it came out, you don't hear me bitching.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    2. Re:Am I missing something? by xenolion · · Score: 1

      Its really nothing new just the Apple fans bitching cause they cant buy the newest items and then brag to their friends or so called friends that they have the Newest Piece of junk from Apple. They signed an agreement for two years make them stay to it just like any other carrier does. Hell I've been with my carrier for 14 years now and I've never had a problem with waiting for my contract to run up by then they have the bugs worked out of the phone I want, its better to wait then to deal with the headache.

  15. It's going to be said a thousand times by Wireless+Joe · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You sign a contract for 24 months to receive a reduced price on your handset. You're not eligible for a discount until a good portion of that commitment has passed (usually 18 months). Owners of the first Gen iPhone got a discount because they bought their phone at full price. 2nd gen iPhone owners who paid full non-contract price are eligible for a discount. People who got a handset (ANY handset) at a discount and are within their contract time won't see one until their time expires. I just bought a new Macbook Pro 11 months ago; should I go to the Apple store and whine because they've improved the design, and I can't buy one for half price?

    1. Re:It's going to be said a thousand times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People who got a handset (ANY handset) at a discount and are within their contract time won't see one until their time expires.

      People who had been on contract in the past will not see the discounted price until two years after their contract expires. This appears to include people who brought their own handset for which they paid full price.

    2. Re:It's going to be said a thousand times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're missing the point. What if your neighbor got the latest MBP for 50% off simply because he was a first-time Apple customer. And you, who already owns a MBP, would have to pay full price because you already have one MBP? I don't think you'd be very happy about that. Current AT&T customers who want to upgrade have to sign a new 2-year contract, the same as new customers. What's the difference between the current customers and new ones? Nothing. Both want to buy a new phone and both are willing to sign a 2-year contract to do it. But for some reason the person who has already been giving money to AT&T is being forced to pay more for the same product and service that the new customer will receive.

    3. Re:It's going to be said a thousand times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I don't understand is why not just offer a re-subsidized phone w/ another 2yr contract, and an even larger early termination fee?

      Keeps your customers further indebted to you, and keeps your ignorant customers happy (yay debt!)

    4. Re:It's going to be said a thousand times by hattig · · Score: 1

      Your example doesn't make sense because 2/3rds of the cost of the iPhone is hidden in the contract that runs for 2 years.

      When you buy a MBP you aren't buying a contract (unless you get it as part of a 3G Data deal from a service provider, in which case the computer is usually a bit cheap, e.g., half price netbooks can be bought when you sign up for a year of 3G data) so this doesn't apply.

      Once your contract runs out, or earlier even, you become elegible for an upgrade at the reduced price! So you aren't even being denied the upgrade.

      If you don't understand this, then you are mentally deficient.

  16. This is nothing new. by JimXugle · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you had an Original Motorola RAZR and you wanted a new one, you had to pay full price.

    I fail to see the issue here.

    --
    -jX

    Don't you just love politics? It's like a comedy of errors.
    1. Re:This is nothing new. by Milkyfresh · · Score: 1

      I fail to see the issue here.

      Same here. It is all spelled out in the contract. It is like this with any piece of new, 'cutting edge' hardware for cell phones. You want the latest and greatest? You'll be stuck with it for at least a year, probably two. I've never understood wanting to be on the bleeding edge of cell phone technology. I want my phone to make calls first, do the fancy stuff second

    2. Re:This is nothing new. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      If you had an Original Motorola RAZR and you wanted a new one, you had to pay full price.

      I fail to see the issue here.

      I think that's primarily because there isn't one. An issue, I mean. Besides, these people are dealing with a. SBC (yes, yes, I know it's still called "AT&T" but we all know what it really is and b. Apple Computer. Neither of those two companies has ever been particularly trustworthy with regards to their customers.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    3. Re:This is nothing new. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      these people are dealing with a. SBC (yes, yes, I know it's still called "AT&T" but we all know what it really is

      Yeah. Ma Bell.

      and b. Apple Computer. Neither of those two companies has ever been particularly trustworthy with regards to their customers.

      True dat.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:This is nothing new. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the issue isn't going out to buy a new one. Sure, you could do that with a RAZR, but did you have to pay twice as much? You walk into ATT and ask for a new phone, and they find out you have an iphone already you have to pay twice the fee unless you get a new contract as well as your old one. Now, if they just charged you the original amount, or slightly higher that'd be different. The way the upgrades work is based on how long you were a customer for. If I'm in a 3 year contract (as I am with rogers, up here in Canada) then at any time it's full price to switch to a new one, after 1 year it's slightly less. After two it's even less than that and at three years I get the same deal (or better) as a new signup.

    5. Re:This is nothing new. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could easily get a new one, just wait a week for the old one to break down and bring it in.

    6. Re:This is nothing new. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you had an Original Motorola RAZR and you wanted a new one, you had to pay full price.

      Yes but that could be explained as an idiot tax

    7. Re:This is nothing new. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Off-topic I know, but still...

      I had the Motorola RAZR V3, and that was a steaming pile after a few months of use. For a bit over a year, I put up with its intermittent "battery coming loose and shutting off" problem and the phone suddenly deciding it didn't have a Bluetooth module until I power-cycled it. Plus, I saw that I wasn't the only one having this issue.

      About the end of my contract cycle, I got an upgrade to the LG Shine for $25 after rebate. So I got the newest RAZR version out there and they couldn't pay me to upgrade to another one. LG's working fine so far; we'll see if I keep on the LG line next contract cycle, or maybe the phone will have reached "good enough" status by then.

    8. Re:This is nothing new. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I really love is the idea that just because it has always been that way, that is the way it should be... good thing I never got rid of my Horseless Carriage!

  17. Wow by anonymousNR · · Score: 1

    Looking at the first set of comments I am getting a de ja vu of being in youtube.

    --
    -- It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it. -- Aristotle
  18. SUCKERS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What, you thought buying an iphone made you something special? You're just another cell phone customer in the revenue machine, willing to spend more for something shiny.

    1. Re:SUCKERS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol, this is the truth that these iphone owners do not see

  19. They Subsidized the Old Phone by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    They subsidized the old phone on the condition of a two-year contract. Before those terms are up, which you agreed to, you want them to subsidize a new phone?

    Well, if you are breaking the contract cough up the money from the last contract. That would be fair. And probably about $200 anyway.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  20. free upgrades???? by Gothmolly · · Score: 1

    So you have an iPhone, and you loaded some apps on it, and you text your friends, and sit in Starbucks and look cool... and AT&T comes out with a cooler one, and you want a freebie or discount upgrade, because ...... why ?

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
  21. Unsubsidized? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'If you want to upgrade early then you will have to pay full price with no subsidy discount. You can't blame anyone but yourself for your predicament.'

    Yeah, that would make sense if paying the 'unsubsidized' $400 didn't extend the contract by 2 years. I have an iPhone 3G with a broken screen, but I'm not paying $400 and giving AT&T my nutsack as well.

    1. Re:Unsubsidized? by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      Why not, you gave them your nuts when you signed for 2 years to get the 3G.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    2. Re:Unsubsidized? by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that would make sense if paying the 'unsubsidized' $400 didn't extend the contract by 2 years. I have an iPhone 3G with a broken screen, but I'm not paying $400 and giving AT&T my nutsack as well

      1. Go buy an unsubsidized iPhone somewhere.
      2. Take out the SIM from your broken iPhone.
      3. Put it in the new iPhone.

      Congratulations! You have a new phone without an extension on your contract.

    3. Re:Unsubsidized? by slashtivus · · Score: 1

      The 3G was released July 11, 2008 (so less than 1 year is as old as it could possibly be) linky:http://gizmodo.com/391960/iphone-3g-launch-date-confirmed/

      Your warranty is for 1 year. link:http://www.apple.com/support/iphone/service/faq/#warranty1/

      Maybe you should just get it repaired under warranty?

      That took 30 seconds of google and I don't even own an iPhone. (I might be feeding a troll here)

    4. Re:Unsubsidized? by irving47 · · Score: 1

      In all seriousness, if you see this post, and want it fixed for a reasonable (non-$400) price, respond to my slashdot handle @ the domain in my url. I'll get you in contact with my friend's business that does screen/touchpad/battery replacements at a very good price.

      --
      I had a sucky sig.
    5. Re:Unsubsidized? by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      When I bought my iPhone I was told that apple does not cover damage, only manufacturing failures.

  22. Not even P.T. Barnum predicted this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not only did people waste money once on an overpriced cell phone, but now those same people are complaining that they can't now throw away their phone for the priveledge of wasting another couple hundred on a slighly newer version of the same phone.

    Steve Jobs is a genius.
    So was L. Ron Hubbard.

  23. No sympathy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No sympathy from me... Apple fanboys deserve to be slapped, especially so by Apple itself....

    keep up the face slapping

    1. Re:No sympathy by Wovel · · Score: 1

      Except of course apple has nothing to do with it and no one had their face slapped. Besides that. Great post. Unless of course AT&T following the same contracts every other US carrier uses is Apple slapping people in the face.

  24. Let them wait a year.. by acomj · · Score: 1

    Seriously. The oldest iphone out there is just now turning 2 years old. This new ones an improvement, but not a world changing compared to last years.

    People have so little patience, plus they may change the policy anyway.
     

  25. Re:READ THE ARTICLE, FOOL! by jchawk · · Score: 4, Informative

    They are absolutely not doing this. I am an existing AT&T customer who has an iphone. I am no longer under a current contract as I have been waiting for the new iPhone. I just double checked before posting and I qualify for an upgrade to the new iPhone if at the discount pricing if I am willing to sign a 2 year agreement with AT&T.

    Apple doesn't subsidize these phones the phone carriers do.

    Nothing to see here but confused forum posters and bloggers move along please.

  26. Waaa Waaaa Waaaaa get a life whiners. by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 0

    Get over it this is how all the providers work, its a subsidized phone and they have to be sure the hardware gets paid for. I just got a 16G iphone last month for my wife and mine three months ago, I've been with AT&T since they landed in Phoenix maybe they should upgrade me for free? Hardly.

    --
    Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
    1. Re:Waaa Waaaa Waaaaa get a life whiners. by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 1

      How did I read that article and screw up it's implications so badly? Well I guess my Dad is going to cancel out of my family plan (his part of the contract ended last year) and then re-up, take my phone and I'll get the new iPhone so SCREW UP AT&T I'm going to beat your system!

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
  27. no no NO!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is Slashdot. We have to complain about how Apple "Fanbois" are whiny and never satisfied. How DARE you introduce facts into this discussion? How DARE you destroy the dream?!???

    1. Re:no no NO!!!! by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      We have to complain about how Apple "Fanbois" are whiny and never satisfied.

      Yeah, well, that's pretty much the truth. Just watch my karma disappear for making that remark. I wonder what would happen if someone were to publish a cartoon making fun of Apple owners? They'd probably issue a fatwa against the poor devil.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:no no NO!!!! by bXTr · · Score: 1

      I wonder what would happen if someone were to publish a cartoon making fun of Apple owners?

      Probably, the same thing that would happen to someone who published a cartoon making fun of Linux users.

      --
      It's a very dark ride.
    3. Re:no no NO!!!! by Tokerat · · Score: 1

      Everyone in "Camp Linux" would cry foul and outrage, while the Mac and Windows camps would point and laugh?

      Note: You can switch around any of those platform names in that sentence and it will always be true; it's like a Karnaugh map with all 1s. Unfortunately though, even though that indicates none of us should ever care about the inputs, we apparently missed that lesson in Digital Circuits 101.

      --
      CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
    4. Re:no no NO!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  28. A discounted iPhone upgrade at a higher price by tniermann · · Score: 1

    This is a quote from the AT&T site when upgrading from the original IPhone non3G "As a valued AT&T customer, we can offer you a discounted iPhone upgrade at a higher price, along with a 2-year commitment and an $18 upgrade fee. Please proceed with the online upgrade process for pricing details. You may qualify for a full discount on a standard iPhone upgrade on 07/23/2009
    I then try to select the single line to upgrade and the site tells me only select a single line. They seem to not want to sell to existing customers till 7/23.

    1. Re:A discounted iPhone upgrade at a higher price by swb · · Score: 1

      There may be some supply manipulation going on. Either they expect a greater demand from "qualified" users holding out for this new phone than Apple can supply, or they are trying to limit the number of used 3G phones dumped into the marketplace that might tempt people looking at the cheap 8GB 3G phone otherwise.

  29. what is the issue? by roc97007 · · Score: 1

    I don't understand what the issue is. The great majority of new features can be had by flashing your current iphone to 3.0, and then opening the little door and putting in a bigger...micro...sd...card... Oh, I forgot. Never mind.

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    1. Re:what is the issue? by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      and replacing the camera with one that sounds like it might actually be useful.

      32gig, a camera, better battery life, and being slightly faster are the things that make it attractive. I'm still not sure I'll bother upgrading mine though.

  30. Re:READ THE ARTICLE, FOOL! by Wovel · · Score: 1

    Apple wrote their legalease in a somewhat confusing manner, but no they did not say what you wrote in bold.

  31. Phone subsidies hurt many things by btempleton · · Score: 1

    The U.S. market is dominated by subsidized phones. Get $200 off a phone, agree to a contract (2 years in US, 3 in Canada) where you pay back a lot more than the $200 credit you were given. From a business standpoint, of course they are not going to subsidize you faster, at least not as a rule.

    However, this system has hurt the phone market. It creates higher margins in cell phone retailing (that's why you see so many cell phone stores everywhere) and for handset vendors, but it also requires that phones have annoying subsidy locks that stop you from going easily to other carriers, or putting in other SIMs when overseas -- enabling huge roaming charges.

    It would be better if you could say, "Look, instead of $200 off a phone, if I bring my own phone, will you give me $10/month off my plan if I commit to 2 years?" Costs the carrier the same, approximately.

    Then we would get more competition in handsets, and less carrier control of handsets too.

    --
    Has it been over a year since you last donated to the Electronic Frontier Foundation
    1. Re:Phone subsidies hurt many things by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      In most countries if you bring your own phone there's no commitment other than the month by month payment (far less than the subsidised contracts of course).

      OTOH in the US they get it good - they let you terminate legally binding contracts early by paying $200. And you still complain. Everyone else has to pay all the remaining months of their contract to buy out of it.

    2. Re:Phone subsidies hurt many things by Dynedain · · Score: 1

      It would be better if you could say, "Look, instead of $200 off a phone, if I bring my own phone, will you give me $10/month off my plan if I commit to 2 years?" Costs the carrier the same, approximately.

      But it doesn't cost the same to the carrier. The carrier turns a profit on the phone if they sell it to you (regardless of whether they subsidize that over time). If they don't sell it to you because you provide your own, that eats dramatically into their profit. It's not a direct cost, it is the soft cost of reduced income.

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
    3. Re:Phone subsidies hurt many things by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      I think the issue a lot of us in the US have is that the subsidized service rate is generally the same as the unsubsidized rate. I personally take pretty good care of my cell phones for example. I have an extra drawer with about 5 of them in there that still work fine, but my contract just ran out (I'm sure a few won't work on a newer network, but the phone still technically worked when I stopped using it). Every 18 months I end up replacing the things because there's not really an incentive NOT to. My bill doesn't go down any because my contract is out. My carrier (Verizon) is the only one that has service out where I'm out anyways so I know I'm staying with them another 2 years regardless. Might as well take yet another freebie phone (which it pretty much is, because I'm going to pay the same amount even if I don't take it).

      The contracts I just don't have an issue with. What I'd like though is the option to keep using an older phone at a discount.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    4. Re:Phone subsidies hurt many things by btempleton · · Score: 1

      Well, often the phone is sold by a cell phone store, so this is not always true. But my impression is they don't turn that much of a profit on the phones -- I mean technically they sell them below cost.

      However, there is clearly a number where the carrier makes the same amount of money by giving you a discount for your 2 year, no-subsidized-phone contract as subsidizing your phone for the contract. Perhaps it's not a discount of $200, perhaps it is less. Whatever it is, that would be good.

      But of course it also gives the carrier control. And it makes the handset vendors beholden to the carriers because you can't sell a handset if the carrier won't put it on the subsidy list, so you take out features etc.

      The iPhone turned that around a bit, with Apple dictating some things to AT&T, but caving in on others as well.

      --
      Has it been over a year since you last donated to the Electronic Frontier Foundation
    5. Re:Phone subsidies hurt many things by EastCoastSurfer · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I used to be anti-contract out of principal. I bought the phone up front and was month to month. It gives you some freedom to switch providers (and hope your phone works on the new provider), but it doesn't save you any money month to month. The rates were always identical. Since I stayed with the same company for years I ended being worse off because I didn't sign a contract and had to pay full price for the phone up front.

    6. Re:Phone subsidies hurt many things by omnichad · · Score: 1

      I've never had a cell phone make it through a full 2 years. But then, I accidentally flushed one of mine down a toilet. Just went wooosh!

  32. Holy Shit by yerktoader · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The general consensus here on Slashdot so far:

    1)"tsfroggy"(RTA) agreed to his/her terms in a contract and has to deal with the pricing like everyone else.

    2)A past discount is not an obligation for a future discount.

    3)"tsfroggy" is a whiner.

    4)AT&T is clearly in the right on this, even if the pricing is too high.

    I must say, Congrats gentlemen. I'll be interested in seeing how long this lasts in this particular thread.

    1. Re:Holy Shit by DamienNightbane · · Score: 2, Insightful

      4)AT&T is clearly in the right on this, even if the pricing is too high.

      If people are paying for it, the price is in no way too high.

    2. Re:Holy Shit by NovaHorizon · · Score: 1

      ETFs are an outrage...

      once a discount is given, the company has lost it's bargaining power by showing it's willing to back down. It must be given again and again.

      "tsfroggy" is the beginning of a new revolution in personal rights and freedoms from businesses.

      AT&T is never right. End of story.

    3. Re:Holy Shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that's right. Any mention of price is always referring to the glorious FREE MARKET and can never be taken in any other context, such as personal preference. Even if it's blitheringly obvious that's what they meant.

    4. Re:Holy Shit by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      I don't think many people are defending ATT, the real point is that the complainers don't have a right to complain because they knew or should have known that this was going to happen anyway. They can't have seriously expected going into the deal that they were going to get a discount on the next iPhone that came out, I don't know why anyone would assume something like that (especially when it's not in the contract, which they also probably never bothered to read).

      ATT are still a bunch of a-holes, it's just that the people who willingly signed a contract with ATT and now are being held to the terms of the contract don't have any reason to complain about their contract. If they didn't agree to the terms, they shouldn't have signed it. Incidentally, that's why I never signed an ATT contract, and that's also why you don't hear me complaining about this.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    5. Re:Holy Shit by yerktoader · · Score: 1

      Oh, it's so clear now. They couldn't possibly be stacking anything in their favor or manipulating variables to the disservice of their customers.

    6. Re:Holy Shit by yerktoader · · Score: 1

      Yeah, me either. It's really no surprise that ATT's terms and service are crummy, and I was quite disappointed(if unsurprised) when Apple went exclusively with them. Needless to say I don't have an iPhone.

    7. Re:Holy Shit by DamienNightbane · · Score: 1

      Nobody is forcing people to buy the phones. They can charge whatever they want for them and as long as people are still willing to pay, the price is not too high.

  33. just cancel and renew? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    couldn't you just cancel your two year contract, pay the ETF, and start anew?

  34. Cry me a river by L4m3rthanyou · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Stop the presses, customers are being price-gouged by AT&T and Apple! Oh, the horror!

    Who is going to expect sympathy over the fact that they have to pay $200 more to upgrade their iPhone?

    Why is this even on the front page? Does Slashdot really worship the iPhone this much?

    --
    One of these days, I'm going to cut you into little pieces.
  35. how about this by beattie · · Score: 1

    If you don't like the product they are offering at the price they are offering it at, don't buy it.

  36. That's Terrible by Thyamine · · Score: 1

    I have wanted an iPhone since they came out, but I have a corporate plan so I'm not eligible, ever, for an upgrade the way our company handles it. I have to buy one outright to get it too, so stop whining. One of these days I may actually buy one as a gift to myself, but until then I'm in the same boat. Just be glad you have one and not some generic blackberry.

    --
    I will shred my adversaries. Pull their eyes out just enough to turn them towards their mewing, mutilated faces. Illyria
  37. Re:READ THE ARTICLE, FOOL! by puck01 · · Score: 1

    I read the article. I did not see that part having read it now several time It said that new customers and those that qualify will get the discount. The 'those that qualify' it implied were the people at the end of their contract. I'm not sure how this is any different then other cell phone providers.

  38. Re:Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is totally out of left field. It's a good thing the US is chock-a-block with better wireless carriers and the iPhone is portable between them.

    Very funny, and for some reason it makes me want to throw up.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  39. Do not complain...do something about it by bogaboga · · Score: 1

    Why don't you and your colleagues in the same situation band up and start up a non-profit phone company? This company will not have a shortage of subscribers as the number of people being ripped off by these phone companies is not in short supply.

    It reminds me of the town of Wilson that Time Warner refused internet service and they (the town), did something about it.

    1. Re:Do not complain...do something about it by DaMattster · · Score: 1

      That's pretty cool! I am honestly surprised that didn't spark the interest of Time Warner and force a fight between them and Wilson. I've often thought about doing that in response to the absolute crap that companies like Time Warner, COX, Comcast, and Qwest force you to put up with. The tiered service and nickle and dime garbage. In fact, I looked into starting my own internet with some friends because I was sick of the politics of IANA, ICANN, etc.

    2. Re:Do not complain...do something about it by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      That'd be fighting fair. If I recall correctly, TW figured the best way to fight that was to go to the state government and get them to force the city to close the ISP down.

    3. Re:Do not complain...do something about it by DaMattster · · Score: 1

      Yes, that has happened with other communications companies which is why you'd need a group of folks to start a non-profit company that is separate from government to pull this off. This was some creative maneuvering on the part of Wilson, NC. Basically, TW is competing with Greenlight (a non-profit.) Since all Greenlight needs to do is cover its expenses and can accept donations, TW cannot possibly compete. Government can get involved through the offering of grants to greenlight and you've just done an end run around TW.

  40. Whine all you want. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know you will pay it.. You'll bitch the entire time.. BUT you will still give them money.

    Wont you. at&t knows it too. bitch bitch bitch bitch and still pay the hugely inflated price for a PHONE.. they've got you pegged dead on. you trendy little yuppie geek.

    Now stfu and go get your checkbook.

    1. Re:Whine all you want. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      You know you will pay it.. You'll bitch the entire time.. BUT you will still give them money.

      Business 101 ... whatever the market will bear.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  41. Here's what I do. by reidiq · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I've had the iPhone 3G for almost a year now. AT&T prorates their termination fee by $5 per month. That means after one year $5 * 12 = $60 off the fee. $175 - 60 = $115 that I pay to cancel my contract. Buy the new iPhone 3GS for whatever model you want at the new 2 year agreement and voila! You got a new iPhone for $199/$299 + 115 = $314/$414. Save money but you'll lose your number more than likely. Not sure if I feel the need to upgrade the phone. The firmware update is sexy in itself. I do like the 2x faster loading speeds for going into apps but I think I can hold out till next year for the iPhone 4G 2 turbo dubs edition. I hope iPhone can break of the exclusivity to AT&T, AT&T is horrid. Last and not least, TOMTOM WOOOOOOO!!

    --
    Sig? No thanks. I don't smoke.
  42. Why not just add to your term by Plug · · Score: 1

    Why not work it like this:

    • 2008: you buy a phone on a 2 year contract (expiring in 2010)
    • 2009: you want a new phone, they still need a 2 year billing commitment. So, add that time to your current contract. Now you have two phones and a contractual obligation until 2012.

    Rinse, renew, add another two years every time. They could even make you trade the old phone in.

    Alas, companies are so much more interested in new customers than keeping the current ones happy.

    1. Re:Why not just add to your term by Wovel · · Score: 1

      I think there a couple of reasons:

      Your original phone has almost no value. Refurbs of current models are ok, refurbs of previous models are worthless.
      You are asking them to defer their revenue, potentially out forever. It reduces their real income and significantly increases their risk.

      There were a lot of things to be annoyed with AT&T about today, this was just not one of them.

    2. Re:Why not just add to your term by MBGMorden · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because you're essentially running up "debt" that way, that the phone company is going to take longer and longer to recoup. When they give you a discount on that phone, they're essentially loaning the money for a set time. Asking for a year's extension on that time costs them. Imagine if a customer did that every year as the new models came out. They extend their contract to 3 years now. Next year they're up to 4 if they switch out. Pretty soon they're racking up owed contract years that they'll either newer get to, or they're going to have to eventually wait out for an extremely long amount of time before they can get a new phone.

      I mean honestly, if this guy is whining now about this model - do you honestly think he's going to get this one and then wait THREE years (an eternity on the cell phone market) before picking up the newest model? No, he's going to want the latest and greatest every time. If he wants that then fine, but he needs to cowboy up and pay the full price.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
  43. how do US phone plans work? by quenda · · Score: 1

    I.E. You have a current Iphone your contract is expiring tomorrow and you still don't get the new one at a discount. You have to pay the full price.

    Is that the full outright unlocked price, or just a not-so-subsidised and still locked price?
    How does this stuff work in the US? I thought the basic idea is you get a new free/cheap phone every two years by signing or extending a contract.

    Other countries have competition laws to stop blatant abuse, e.g. requiring a contract and locking the handset. (no proper reason for both).

    1. Re:how do US phone plans work? by alen · · Score: 1

      you can unlock almost any phone. problem is we have 2 GSM carriers and 2 CDMA carriers so you can't take your phone to just any carrier you want. some phones have CDMA (made by Qualcom) chips in them and others have GSM. later this year 4th generation cell phone network tech is coming to the US and it's a worldwide standard so in a few years all carriers will be GSM

    2. Re:how do US phone plans work? by Glendale2x · · Score: 1

      I know Verizon is making the move away from CDMA but I haven't heard anything about what Sprint is doing to do with their CDMA network.

      --
      this is my sig
  44. Just what we need. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great, now we'll see hippies smokin pot in protest.

  45. AT&T is stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's fucked up because of how short sighted they are. instead of eating $200 and letting me buy a new one and signing a NEW 2-year contract, they are trying to fuck existing users in the ass. of course that's how subsidies work, people aren't pissed about that you fucking retards. what they are pissed about is the total lack of customer loyalty AT&T is showing, which is especially infuriating because their services SUCKS DONKEY ASSHOLE. Providers make their money from services, they should just extend existing users contracts by two years. I'm speaking with my wallet and telling AT&T to go fuck themselves, no new iPhone for me and time to cancel my shitty service, in Los Angeles of all places I can't use my phone. It's ridiculous.

    1. Re:AT&T is stupid by Wovel · · Score: 1

      I am sure they will miss your winning personaliy.

  46. Bingo! by King_TJ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Honestly, given the current state of our economy, I'm surprised more people aren't ashamed to post such nonsense.... Even though we don't yet know exactly what will be in the latest revision of the iPhone, all indications point to a few relatively minor tweaks, like a built in compass and ability to use the faster tier of 3G cellular data network. Oh, and likely a faster graphics processor, which is nice -- but did anyone honestly have issues with it updating too slowly before? This will only matter for some games that want to push the envelope a little further with how much you can do on a phone. FAR from a necessity, especially for those of us who'd rather play "real" games on a home computer or console system anyway!

    Heck, I bought one of the very early 1st. gen. iPhones, and I didn't WANT to go to the 3G model. The version using the slower EDGE network was about $10 cheaper per month to keep a contract on, and I thought it had a more "solid" feel to it than the plastic-backed, sloped wedge shape of the current model. But finally, when mine started acting up, outside the warranty period, it just made more sense to buy a new phone.

    If you can get past the pointless "keeping up with the Jones'" attitude for a minute, I fail to see why a 3G iPhone owner would be that compelled to rush out and upgrade at all? Those that have that irrational need to "show off" by having one first? Well, let them pay full retail price!

    1. Re:Bingo! by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Because you have to understand the Apple mentality. It is upgrade, upgrade, upgrade to the latest and greatest model. Whereas people with PC hardware/mentalities tend to upgrade slowly. Most Apple people actually want to give money to Apple as if it were a charitable cause.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    2. Re:Bingo! by thejynxed · · Score: 3, Informative

      Here's why:

      iPhone 3G-S

      (Currently, the processor is assumed to be an ARM, but unknown version and clock speed, Apple makes vague claims about being twice as fast on average as the ARM 11 in the previous iPhone 3G)

      Camera: 3.0 megapixel autofocus with macro mode and auto white balance. -- You mean I can finally take outdoor shots at the Audubon and have them look somewhat decent? AND be able to send them back to my PC remotely? AND not have to lug along my laptop? HELL YES.

      Video: 30fps VGA with on-device editing capability -- Now you don't need to jailbreak your phone to record video. Hallelujah.

      Voice Control: Dialing, music control --- I hope it actually works, and if it does? Sweeeeeeeeeet.

      Nike+ Support: Yes - For you exercise nuts.

      Networking: 7.2Mbps HSDPA, WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR --- This alone makes it worth the upgrade, note that the 7.2Mbps is double what the old iPhone 3G has to offer. Essential for making tethering actually useful.

      Oil/Water resistant finish: Yes - Less smudges? Finally.

      Integrated Magnetic Compass: Yes --- Awesomesauce.

      Headphones: Inline remote for music control --- Remote control my iPhone music playing? ABOUT DAMNED TIME.

      Battery Life: Up to 5 hours talk time / data on 3G, 12 hours on 2G. Up to 9 hours data on WiFi. Up to 30 hours audio. Up to 10 hours video. -- Standard 3G talk time is the same as before. 2G, WiFi, audio and video are all extended a few hours each, with the largest allotment going to audio @ a 4 hour increase.

      I hope this answers your question as to WHY people would want this over the old craptacular 3G iPhone.

      --
      @Mindless Drivel: 100% of Twitter posts ever Tweeted.
    3. Re:Bingo! by AmaranthineNight · · Score: 1

      For me, who got my iPhone about two weeks ago, it's the autofocus camera that's got me wishing I'd known the new model was coming out. Not enough to pay the ridiculous upgrade charges, I guess in two years I can upgrade to the 5th model, or switch to T-Mobile and get me one of them android phones.

    4. Re:Bingo! by Sparton · · Score: 1

      Oh, and likely a faster graphics processor, which is nice -- but did anyone honestly have issues with it updating too slowly before? This will only matter for some games that want to push the envelope a little further with how much you can do on a phone.

      As an iPhone developer, I assure you that this point is pretty much irrelevant. No iPhone game that wants to make money will be made to only work optimally with the newest version, because that means it'll work poorly on such a huge amount of devices currently released. And when the people with the older devices start leaving reviews saying it works incredibly sluggishly...

    5. Re:Bingo! by bertoelcon · · Score: 0

      So features that are most likely going to surpassed in less than 14 months? I still say you cant beat what functions, and its easy enough to carry around 3 devices, phone, camera, mp3 player, and have all that I use normally working much better and longer than any one multi-purpose device.

      --
      Anything can be found funny, from a certain point of view.
    6. Re:Bingo! by babyrat · · Score: 1

      and its easy enough to carry around 3 devices, phone, camera, mp3 player

      it's exactly 3 times harder than carrying around 1 device.

      That might not be worth 2 or 3 hundred bucks a year (or 14 months) to you but it is to me...easily. And it doesn't matter if it's an iPhone or another device - whatever gets the job done.

    7. Re:Bingo! by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      noob!

      WWDC has been on the blogs for 6 months guessing a new iPhone was coming... just like the two years before had new iphone announcements....

      it's not rocket science.

    8. Re:Bingo! by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'd say that's backwards. Most old-school Apple users I see have macs in use for years beyond what PC users do. It's the CPU/GPU twitch crowd that upgrade $1000 CPUs and $500 Graphics cards every 12-18 months that are having a problem adapting to the Apple idea of paying more money less often and just being happy with it.

    9. Re:Bingo! by IKnwThePiecesFt · · Score: 1

      Most carriers have a 30 day return policy that lets you escape your contract.

    10. Re:Bingo! by AmaranthineNight · · Score: 1

      I don't spend a lot of time reading blogs. I picked up the iPhone because my phone died, my previous contract was up, and I loved my iPod touch. I'm happy with it the way it is, just wished the timing had been better, and I might have gotten a better camera with the deal.

    11. Re:Bingo! by gleffler · · Score: 1

      If you got it less than 30 days ago, you will almost definitely be eligible to switch to the 3GS by paying the restocking fee + price difference. This is what happened to people who bought 2G iPhones right before the announcement of the iPhone 3G.

      Granted, that doesn't mean AT&T will behave exactly the same way again, but I can't see why they wouldn't, since you could just cancel your contract and start a new one when the 3GS is released instead, and this way looks better on their books (if you cancel & restart you've then created 'false churn' which does not make their investors happy.)

    12. Re:Bingo! by NovaHorizon · · Score: 1

      you mean 3.4mbps was unbearably slow to you? Perhaps you should stop downloading pr0n, or large files through your phone. standard web pages should seem to load at the same speed with anything over 1mbps (know many web pages over 128KB?). You only have a 5GB/month limit on bandwidth when tethering.. that's.. an hour and a half of full usage.

    13. Re:Bingo! by AmaranthineNight · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I'll see what I can do about that.

    14. Re:Bingo! by rgo · · Score: 1

      Nike+ Support: Yes - For you exercise nuts.

      Woah, with the iPhone, now I can exercise my nuts.

      Wonderful!

    15. Re:Bingo! by geckofiend · · Score: 1

      "given the current state of our economy"

      Funny thing: Not everyone is out of a job, worried about losing their job, or hurting for money. If folks like us don't spend money the economy gets worse. Idiots like you spouting lines like that and making people feel bad or second guess themselves are making the problem worse not better.

    16. Re:Bingo! by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      I hope this answers your question as to WHY people would want this over the old craptacular 3G iPhone.

      Someone needs to cast this in bronze.

      Eleven months from now, we can all come back and reflect on the permanence of this statement...

      Here's a preview of that day...

      I hope this answers your question as to WHY people would want this over the old craptacular 3G-S iPhone.

    17. Re:Bingo! by King_TJ · · Score: 1

      I disagree.

      The economy being poor is a simple FACT. It's not some relative thing you can choose to accept or deny. Almost everyone I know has already lost their job, is concerned about losing their job, or at least has members of their own family in that situation.

      The solution is much bigger than just having everyone who is able "keep spending money". (EG. Check the origin of manufacture on that new iPhone.)

      The problem in America is going to keep getting worse and worse as long as the money we spend keeps gong outside the country, and doesn't come back to us in at least equal proportions with items we export. It's going to keep getting worse and worse as long as we keep trying to band-aid and prop back up failed business models that caused our problems in the first place.

      I'm not saying "Don't consider buying a full-featured and more expensive cellphone!" I'm simply saying, on the whole, Americans need to face the facts that we're in a big economic mess that doesn't have a quick solution or way out. If you're lucky enough to still have a good paying and stable job? Good for you, but you should think ahead and not make assumptions that your situation isn't subject to change.

    18. Re:Bingo! by Poohsticks · · Score: 1

      Indeed - and even more so for those of us who've been limping along on the original iPhone. I wouldn't have bought it for myself but received it as a gift and I'm now really happy with the device (after jailbreaking to get most of the "new" features that will be included in the 3GS). But the hardware improvements are what are now driving me to upgrade. Lucky me - I've just reviewed my upgrade costs with ATT and I get the reduced rate upgrade. Wohooo! Not thrilled with the increase in data charges. It's going to cost me an extra $10 a month for the new phone, but that seems like a small price to pay for the speed and performance boosts that I'm getting.

      --
      "The story so far: In the beginning the Universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry and has been wide
  47. -1 Flamebait by DaMattster · · Score: 1

    So, I know I am inviting trouble here but I honestly don't mean to start a flame war so much as vent. I am no fan of AT&T whatsoever as they were/are complicit in illegal wiretapping. They have a direct feed to Big Brother and this is something that I do not like at all. The iPhone is just another "bling, bling" gadget and you can really do without it. I admit, I had withdrawal when I gave up my Blackberry but it freed up more personal time and I began to enjoy life outside of work. Whatever happened to simplicity in communications? I have two prepaid phones and still pay "much less" than 1 iPhone plan. One of the prepaid phones is a house phone for guests to use, the other is mine.

    1. Re:-1 Flamebait by Wovel · · Score: 2, Informative

      It is much more than a fancy phone or even a blackberry. You are not really comparing apples to apples. (sorry). Yes it is a gadget and no it is not necessary, but no phone is really necessary. Some people want to have one device they can use for phone, email, scheduling, music, games and whatever the other thousands of apps do.

      Having said that, this whole thing is silly. Whole world is turning in to a bunch of entitlement addicts not willing to live up to their obligations.

    2. Re:-1 Flamebait by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      It is much more than a fancy phone or even a blackberry. You are not really comparing apples to apples. (sorry). Yes it is a gadget and no it is not necessary, but no phone is really necessary. Some people want to have one device they can use for phone, email, scheduling, music, games and whatever the other thousands of apps do.

      Holy crap. I don't know what's worse, the blatant iWorship, or the +1 Informative moderations.

      No, it's really NOT much more than a fancy phone or even a blackberry.

    3. Re:-1 Flamebait by The+End+Of+Days · · Score: 1

      It is whatever the user thinks it is, no matter what you think of it.

      It's interesting how some people are seemingly offended by other people enjoying their phone purchase. Why be bothered by what other people do?

  48. Re:Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    T-mobile's network rocks, get your facts straight.

    Apple lemmings. I just picked up a G1 for $98 - does more than the iphone can do, no lock in, a swappable battery (hello 2300!) and memory expansion.

    Have fun being locked into the worst network in the country with a sub-standard phone that cost 4x's too much.

  49. The real issue is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real issue at hand is the policy of greed-over-retention.

    I'll never understand why a company doesn't it reward its current customers first. I've been with AT&T for years now. I actually have AT&T DSL service (no choice) and I have DISH satellite, billed through AT&T. I write three separate checks to AT&T each month. Instead, however, of being thanked for being a loyal, longtime customer, I'm told that to have the latest and greatest, I have to pay more than a new customer would. Seems wrong somehow.

    I understand every company needs to turn a profit. AT&T by overcharging us for the iPhone and Apple by overcharging AT&T for the iPhone.

  50. Mis-set expectations by fullfactorial · · Score: 2, Insightful

    2G cost $599 at launch because it did not require a contract.
    3G cost $199 at launch because it required a contract.
    3GS will cost $199 at launch because it requires a contract.

    Existing iPhone 3G owners can't upgrade for free because they're still paying off their subsidized phone.

    Apple didn't realize the bease they were creating when they asked AT&T to try a non-subsidized model for the initial launch. Now everyone remembers the "free" upgrade to the 3G, but somehow forgets paying $599 for a 2G on launch day.

    1. Re:Mis-set expectations by Archimonde · · Score: 1

      2G cost $599 at launch because it did not require a contract.

      You are wrong here.

      The original iphone did require a contract because the device was carrier locked and you had to activate (and get a plan) in store or at home. Some managed to get prepaid plans, but great majority went with 2year contracts.

      --
      Trolls are like broken clocks. They show the truth two times a day. The rest of the day they talk nonsense.
    2. Re:Mis-set expectations by SSG+Bryan · · Score: 1

      That is because most of the whiners didn't buy a 2G phone. They were too busy whining about the cost of the phone.

  51. Re:Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by Reality+Master+201 · · Score: 1

    I do live in the US, and formerly worked in the wireless communications industry. I've seen the soft, shitty underbelly of the national carriers first hand, and it's an awful and very depressing sight indeed.

    But once LTE takes off, then there'll finally be an even playing field for competition between carriers and the consumers will reap the benefits.

    *chortle*

  52. Registered developers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple and the various carriers should (but won't) make an exception for registered developers, since the choice to upgrade is often not optional (as it is for regular consumers). It is commonly the case that we MUST upgrade in order to verify correct performance across multiple hardware iterations.

    My carrier in Canada (FIDO) apparently won't allow upgrades for subscribers until their contract runs out. This may be as much as two or three years in the future. How can I develop for new hardware or operating system if I'm not allowed to purchase the device?

    1. Re:Registered developers by Wovel · · Score: 1

      Cost of doing business I suppose. If you are developing free applications, it will probably not be difficult to find willing testers. For the quality of the material they provide, the service they give and the extremely low if any cost to developers, you will not see most of them whining about this.

  53. Why is this an apple problem.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are people really this stupid. This problem has existed for YEARS. The problem is that now phone upgrades are more desirable because of Apple.

    As an iPhone and AT&T customer I would be FAR more pissed they still do not offer the same insurance services that are offered for every other device that AT&T promotes, including equally expensive HTC devices.

    The Cell phone industry is a racket, how people have not caught on by now is amazing, but hardly anyone's fault but their own.

  54. Re:READ THE ARTICLE, FOOL! by sbeckstead · · Score: 1

    You funny boy, learn to read maybe!

  55. Re:Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by musicalwoods · · Score: 1

    Hello, you obviously don't live here. There is ONE other national GSM carrier in the US besides AT&T, that is T-Mobile and their 3G network is weak at best (or at least is vastly less mature).

    Nextly, that doesn't matter much if you want a subsidy from the sole official provider of the iPhone in the US.

    Woosh!

  56. It's a good thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use Tracfone, a prepaid phone. Oh, and I am a PC.

    1. Re:It's a good thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are things you shove up your ass?

    2. Re:It's a good thing... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      What are things you shove up your ass?

      My guess? Extra batteries.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  57. Re:Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by biased_estimator · · Score: 1

    WHOOOOOoooooo.....ooooooOOOOOOOSHHHHHHHH.....

  58. This is Apple's selling strategy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have to say this is Apple's fault to advertise iphone at "wrong" price. I think as many posters here says, ATT has its right to decide who is eligible for the upgrade price, but Apple shouldn't advertise the phone based on the "upgrade" price. Instead, it should say it gonna cost $599/$699 and if you are eligible for upgrade, you can get it for $199/$299. That's more like the normal way any major phone company will do. I think Apple is smart enough to pass the anger to ATT. Quite smart move but honestly, it's kinda shame on them to make their business partner ATT to suffer the "fault."

    1. Re:This is Apple's selling strategy! by Wovel · · Score: 1

      Except AT&T advertises phones exactly the same way and everyone in the US knows how cell phone pricing works...

    2. Re:This is Apple's selling strategy! by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Except AT&T advertises phones exactly the same way and everyone in the US knows how cell phone pricing works...

      Yes, but anyone who ever buys an Apple product is somehow ... special. Everyone knows that. Heck, I had an Apple ][ Standard way back in 1978 or thereabouts. And you know what? I still feel special.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  59. And that is why I continue to wait.... by paulsnx2 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    For some people, the IPhone as currently configured is just huge. They travel, or they do work that doesn't involve a computer....

    Me, I am in front of a computer all day. Sure there are time when having access to email when out and about would be nice, but seriously, it isn't something that is killing me.

    So I use a three or four year old phone. It can do messaging, and I can play a game or two, and use some Star Trek ring tones.

    I will buy a Smart phone. But only when that 1) doesn't lock me into a single provider, and 2) all this kind of crap has settled out, and 3) when such a phone isn't locked into one vertical change of command (Apple).

    I don't want to spend huge dollars on a phone only to have to spend huge dollars to get the next iteration. I will wait until the delta between iterations isn't so vast.

    So one of these years I think smart phones will let me run applications I get from third parties. They will interface with my computers as well as with the Internet. And I will be able to reasonably make a phone call. And that phone will not break the bank.

    1. Re:And that is why I continue to wait.... by Savior_on_a_Stick · · Score: 1

      Well, I pretty much have that already.
      My Tilt/HTC Win Mobile phone cost my company $200.
      I have a 2gig micro sd card in it currently, but I can bump that up for pocket change if I want.
      I can load any app that it's capable of running, from any source, and I don't need anyone's permission to do so.
      I can get an upgrade any time I want, as the contract on that line has been met.
      But there isn't a compelling enough phone to justify an upgrade - ie: not enough delta.
      I'm not interested in the phones designed to emulate the iphone look/feel.
      I need the finer control on my screen that comes with a pressure sensitive screen/stylus.
      Smart Phones already do let you run apps from any vendor.
      The Iphone is NOT a Smart Phone.

  60. Our contracts are UP! Why Renew Now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This could be bad for both Apple and AT&T. Id wager that most people (like me) bought the original phone and stuck with it. Now, 2 years later our ATT contracts are FINALLY expiring- why should we lock ourselves into another long term contract just as other mobile communications platforms are really starting to look attractive (Palm PRE)?

  61. You bought your 1st gen before it was released? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It hasn't been 365 x 2 days since the iPhone went on sale. How is your contract ALREADY up?

    1. Re:You bought your 1st gen before it was released? by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      I'm just guessing here, but maybe he already had an AT&T contract and then bought a 2G iPhone. When they first came out it was easier to get one without a contract, just take one home from the Apple store and throw your SIM in it.
       
      The subsidized pricing and in-store activation came later.
       
      But some cell companies (or all) will do you the "service" of renewing your contract if your SIM shows up on the network in a new phone, so maybe that's not what happened.

    2. Re:You bought your 1st gen before it was released? by kakalaky · · Score: 1

      You get upgrade pricing from AT&T after 18 months. I'm eligible for upgrade now and still have 4 months left in my contract.

  62. Slap in the face, perhaps not. by MrPerfekt · · Score: 1

    I'm not thrilled about not have a subsidy but I see the rationale. They don't want people dumping their suddenly displaced iP3G on eBay for $200, since people would lap that up without a contract because the current 3G phone is "good enough" for most people.

    However, this move will hurt number of units moved, which in the end, I think Apple cares about more than the kickbacks they're getting from AT&T for contracts. This is probably just more AT&T dickery. There has been plenty of that today with the MMS and Tethering issues.

    --
    I just wasted your mod points! HA!
    1. Re:Slap in the face, perhaps not. by Kaz+Riprock · · Score: 1

      You are spot on with the MMS and Tethering delays. That, alone, is enough reason to indict AT&T for asshatery more than any lack of upgrade pricing on 3G to 3GS.

      You're squeezing us so hard because of your exclusivity, AT&T, but not keeping up with the hardware/software developer. You might just find more of us finding our way between your clenched fingers because of it. I've held off on jailbreaking my phone, but I could be using MMS and tethering TODAY if I wanted to, AT&T. Of course, then, I wouldn't have to be forced into being your customer, either. Consider your expediency in meeting the developer's abilities wisely.

      --
      Mordor...a magical, mythical land where women are more rare than dragons--but where every man would rather find a dragon
    2. Re:Slap in the face, perhaps not. by Savior_on_a_Stick · · Score: 1

      You could use a real Smart Phone instead of a Cupertino tinkertoy.

      I can tether my ATT Smart Phone with no extra cost or caps.

      And with a $20 3rd party app, it acts as a wireless 3g/HSPDA router.

      The Iphone is pretty, but largely useless - like most of the people I see in the Apple Store when I bring in company owned Apple crap for repair work.

  63. Customers? by aaandre · · Score: 3, Informative

    The shareholders are the customers. Service subscribers (you) are the product. Your only power is to vote with your dollar, by the numbers.

    Know your place, know your options.

    Oh, and apple product update cycles are pretty predictable.

    1. Re:Customers? by Wovel · · Score: 1

      Which is why I did not upgrade my original iphone when the 3G came out ( I mean really it was less than a year old) and now will be enjoying my new subsidized 3GS

    2. Re:Customers? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Which is why I did not upgrade my original iphone when the 3G came out ( I mean really it was less than a year old) and now will be enjoying my new subsidized 3GS

      Well ... patience is a virtue, you know.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    3. Re:Customers? by Itninja · · Score: 1

      They do indeed have customers that most likely own an iPhone or two, sure. But the only shareholders that actually matter are major shareholders (i.e. mutual funds, board members). Do you seriously think these high rollers give a deuce about the iPhone? Do you think any of them even own one? Most likely they have 'people' to handle all their communications. And if they do not, then they probably have a big-boy communications device like a Blackberry.

      --
      I judt got a nre Kinesis keybiartf so please excusr ant egregiou typos.
    4. Re:Customers? by mybecq · · Score: 1

      The shareholders are the customers

      Wrong.

      Customer: a person who purchases goods or services from another; buyer; patron.

      Investor: one who puts into an enterprise with the expectation of profit.

      Since shareholders do not purchase product (subscribers), they are investors, not customers.

    5. Re:Customers? by aaandre · · Score: 1

      The definition you provide is correct.

      And, when a company is focusing on maximizing their profits at the cost of the quality of service provided. Thus the company does not really serve the customers any more, but its investors. When that happens, the customers become a product, and the investors become the real customer.

      I am implying that at some point, greed compromises the service provider - customer relationship and takes the company's integrity away.

  64. Makes Complete Sense by CritterNYC · · Score: 1

    This makes complete sense to everyone except for a couple little complainers in the forum post. I mean, it's really, really simple.

    1. The real, unsubsidized price of the iPhone is $399 for the 16GB and $499 for the 32GB version.
    2. You can get a $200 discount by locking yourself into a 2 year contract with AT&T.
    3. If you're not at the end of your current 2 year contract (for which you already got a $200 discount off your last iPhone), you can't get another $200 discount on another new phone.

    I mean, really. This is basic, basic cell phone stuff in the US here.

    1. Re:Makes Complete Sense by Justus · · Score: 1

      While I admit that it is indeed par for the course for US cellphone carriers, the pricing is a little funny.

      Although you say the real, unsubsidized price of the iPhone is $400 for the 16GB version, if I want to upgrade the phone on my plan (I have an iPhone 3G) for that price, AT&T indicates they'll sign me up for another 2 year contract. Additionally, the prorated ETF for my contract after 12 months is $115; it would actually be cheaper for me to break contract, pay the $115, then sign up as a "new" customer to buy the phone at $200. Their pricing scheme would make a lot more sense if they just charged you the new contract price plus the prorated ETF (and it would grant the "they subsidized you, so suck it up!" argument a little more weight).

      All that being said, none of the features are really compelling enough to upgrade for $400. I do wish I had a bit more space (I only have the 8GB model), but I'll just live without any lossless encoding on my iPhone until next year.

  65. boo fuckin hoo!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I waited for the 3g and now I can't get the new one? BOO FUCKING HOO!! Quit your fucking whining and suck it up like the rest of us. Fucking jackasses.

  66. Business as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell me how is this different from another other carrier? When you are "locked" into your contract you can't do much about getting a new phone sort of paying an outright price. AT&T and Apple are not the only ones who do this, every carrier does. Get use to it people. If you want to upgrade your phone sooner, choose a sorter contract length, plain and simple. Of course everyone wants the latest and greatest. Quit being greedy.

  67. They don't do this for other cell phones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so why would you expect them to do this for the iphone? I don't expect to get any phone whether it's an upgraded version of the one I already have or not with a discount unless I'm renewing my contract or signing on with another company. No phone company does this for any product, welcome to this version of reality fan boys.

  68. Posting from my iPhone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is there an app yet that I can download for $9.99 that will auto-post on the att.com forums that I am against this policy? Otherwise I'm not going to bother to put down my grande chai tea latte to type anything up myself.

  69. This is me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... playing the world's smallest violin.

    Hey, wait! There's an app for that!

  70. Car Analogy by tiger32kw · · Score: 1

    I had an 08 Honda Accord... when I found out they were coming out with the 09 Honda Accord I was so fucking pissed! I had just spent $20,000 on this thing and they are already coming out with a new one! It was outrageous. I felt like they should have given me the 09 for free (or at least real cheap) so I went to my dealership and got all pissy in their face. They said sorry your logic is dumb. Alas nothing happened. This is stupid.

  71. Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by PC+and+Sony+Fanboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Bunch of crybabies.

    No, its a bunch of rabid apple fanboys who want to piss away more money to apple, but can't stand the idea of paying AT&T a little extra cash for the contract they willingly accepted.

    I'd be upset too, if I didn't know that apple released new products yearly with their masterplan of planned obsolescence.

    1. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bunch of crybabies. No, its a bunch of rabid apple fanboys who want to piss away more money to apple, but can't stand the idea of paying AT&T a little extra cash for the contract they willingly accepted. I'd be upset too, if I didn't know that apple released new products yearly with their masterplan of planned obsolescence.

      No argument from me.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by frdmfghtr · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I'd be upset too, if I didn't know that apple released new products yearly with their masterplan of planned obsolescence.

      And if you're an Apple fan and don't know this, you're not paying attention.

      I don't think I would call it planned obsolescence...tech is advancing just that fast, and the products being replaced are NOT obsolete; they still work, and work well. Do you expect Apple to slow down product development just so you don't feel the need to upgrade every year?

      --
      Government's idea of a balanced budget: take money from the right pocket to balance...oh who am I kidding?
    3. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by bertoelcon · · Score: 1

      I don't think I would call it planned obsolescence...tech is advancing just that fast, and the products being replaced are NOT obsolete; they still work, and work well.

      Only hardware goes that fast, software just gets patches, upgrades, and fixes. OS X and XP have been out for how long and are still doing fine?

      --
      Anything can be found funny, from a certain point of view.
    4. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by bertoelcon · · Score: 1

      Nevermind i forgot OS X upgrades drop backwards compatability, I havent used Apple products since about System 7

      --
      Anything can be found funny, from a certain point of view.
    5. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "I'd be upset too, if I didn't know that apple released new products yearly with their masterplan of planned obsolescence."

      I love this bit of stupidity.

      Apple doesn't release new phones regularly: "Wah. iPhones aren't competitive with models X, Y, and Z."

      Apple releases new phones regularly: "Wah. Planned obsolescence. Apple == teh General Motors of cell phones. Wharrgarbl."

      As an iPhone user, I've gotten enough free upgrades from Apple, just in terms of firmware alone, to justify giving them another couple hundred bucks. A compass, faster CPU, better camera, and you'll throw in the 3.0 software for free? Well, OK, Steve, you talked me into it.

      Besides, it took three whole days last week for AAPL to go up enough to pay for my new phone. Somebody call the waaambulance, and alert the violin section.

    6. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I've gotten enough free upgrades from Apple, just in terms of firmware alone, to justify giving them another couple hundred bucks.

      If you think as an Apple user that getting firmware updates for features and stuff that should have already been in the phone in the first place is worth paying "hundreds of dollars" for than you guys really are fucking stupid.
      "I'm so glad our government is kind enough to let us breath this air for free! I would pay thousands of dollars for it!"

    7. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think as an Apple user that getting firmware updates for features and stuff that should have already been in the phone

      Gee, that sounds a lot like your opinion.

      Who's your phone manufacturer? What have they given you for free lately?

    8. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee, that sounds a lot like your opinion.

      Well if you consider not having cut and paste, MMS functionality, voice memos and internet tethering out of the original box fine then you're still fucking stupid for buying a substandard phone.

      Who's your phone manufacturer? What have they given you for free lately?

      Nokia but don't even get me started on Nokia... but it ultimately doesn't matter, all phone manufacturers are garbage, they all suck.
      Ironically the main problem I have with Nokia is they give me too much stuff for free, I don't want any of the software crap they offer, I only use it because of mShell.

    9. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      If they were just fanboys, they'd pay full price and buy the stupid phone.

      They're crybabies because they're unwilling to accept reality and want a deal.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    10. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Well if you consider not having cut and paste, MMS functionality, voice memos and internet tethering out of the original box fine then you're still fucking stupid for buying a substandard phone."

      Fucking stupid, or couldn't care less about any of those features? Hmm. What does Professor Occam say?

      OTOH, the appearance out of nowhere of the app store and dozens of other new tweaks and features that weren't promised when I bought the phone is exactly how a cellphone vendor gets on my good side.

      The iPhone did exactly what I wanted it to do when I bought it, and it does much more now, with a total additional cost so far of $0.00. The definition of "fucking stupid" is someone who doesn't see the value proposition in that. Take care of your users, and you deserve to make money.

    11. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by Moofie · · Score: 1

      So what kind of "masterplan of planned obsolescence" includes releasing the iPhone 3.0 OS for my 3G iPhone? I get 80% or more of the new features, for free.

      I wish my car had that kind of planned obsolescence.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    12. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you wanted cut and paste, MMS functionality, voice memos and internet tethering, like most other users.... or else why would they put them in at any point in time? Which phone manufacturer doesn't provide free firmware updates?

    13. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by cerberusss · · Score: 0, Troll

      No argument from me.

      Then why the fuck are you posting here, eh?? With your reasonable, easy-going, smugness we're getting no-where, pussy-boy.

      I'm visiting this site EVERYDAY to drown myself in the raging verbal rapefest between the utterly beyond nerds here and YOU just state "no argument from me"?? Fuck you, you arrogant bastard! You deprive me of my daily dose of liquid rage with your laissez-faire attitude, you hippie motherfucker, and I would like to stick in your face that I DON'T LIKES IT! ktnxbai

      (just joking, just joking...)

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    14. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      <shrug> I can't answer for people who wanted those things. If they did, and they bought some other phone to get them, they got a phone which is arguably crappier than an iPhone in other respects that they presumably didn't care about.

      Either way, it is rare for firmware updates to include much beyond bug fixes and useless shovelware. In fact, we're lucky when manufacturers (yes, including Apple) don't go out of their way to hose existing features.

    15. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      I agree. There is no "obsolescence" involved at all, only progressively better products. Until my 1st and 2nd gen iPhones no longer work and until my 2nd generation through current line of iPods stop working, I'll just keep on picking and choosing when I buy new Apple products and when I feel compelled to skip a version (such as this new iPhone).

    16. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by pwfffff · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Google for 'Android Cupcake' and then consider buying yourself a new phone.

    17. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by Genom · · Score: 1

      As an iPhone user, I've gotten enough free upgrades from Apple, just in terms of firmware alone, to justify giving them another couple hundred bucks.

      Problem being, you're not giving that $200 to Apple, you're giving it to AT&T.

      Regardless of how I feel about the upgrade price, I'm far less likely to feel inclined to give AT&T more money. Their service has been quite poor over the past year. 3G is spotty at best around here, with frequent outages. Combine that with their lack of support for features Apple has built into their new software, the delay on MMS being brought about by intentionally crippling MMS for 3.0 beta users, and most especially the proposed $70/month additional fee for tethering (once they bother to get around to it), and you might see why giving AT&T more money simply doesn't fly right with me.

      As was said in an article at ZDNet, AT&T is the anchor weighing Apple down. Not that any of the other US carriers would treat customers better, mind you.

    18. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by netringer · · Score: 1

      Bunch of crybabies. ...I'd be upset too, if I didn't know that apple released new products yearly with their masterplan of planned obsolescence.

      Of course, if the "masterplan" was thwarted and Apple didn't release new products every year it would be, "What's up with Apple! The iXxxxxxx hasn't been updated in OVER A YEAR! C'Mon! Competitor nnnnn just brought out the Nnnnnn iXxxxxx-killer and Apple didn't answer! The iXxxxx is getting very old in the tooth."

      Here's the newsflash: NOBODY needs this week's model lest they starve,

      As for loyalty, I've been a loyal gas, water and electricity user my whole life but the utilities still don't seem to want to give me a break. I'm going to call and write nasty emails and letters and let them know I will NOT STAND FOR IT!

      --
      Ever dream you could fly? Get up from the Flight Sim. I Fly
    19. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, its a bunch of rabid apple fanboys who want to piss away more money to apple, but can't stand the idea of paying AT&T a little extra cash for the contract they willingly accepted.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poisoning_the_well

    20. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Hey Mods ... it was a JOKE. Don't you read past the first line?

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    21. Re:Not Crybabies.... Fanboys. by XLR8DST8 · · Score: 0

      where is the obsolescence? of course the new phone will be faster, more capacity, etc.. but how is it obsolete? will it not do the same things it did before? will it not work on the same network etc? and to the contrary, with OS 3.0, it will do more than it did before! how is that 'planned obsolescence'?

  72. This is Standard by OneFix · · Score: 1

    I'm not exactly a fan of AT&T/Cingular. I actually have service with Alltel (soon to be Verizon), but this is the same standard "deal" that everyone gives for buying a phone with a contract.

    Looking at the new iPhone, the $200 price is actually cheaper than the 2 year contract price for the HTC Touch from Alltel/Verizon, which seems fair.

    If you knew you would want a new phone in a year, then you should have paid the "1 year contract" price (or at least they used to offer that option).

    At any rate, the price you paid for the phone was subsidized by your signing of the 2 year contract and you shouldn't expect another subsidized phone until your current contract runs out.

  73. For 500$ by Korbeau · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'd rather have 2 very nice escorts, I'd least I'd get screwed right!

    1. Re:For 500$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd rather have 2 very nice escorts, I'd least I'd get screwed right!

      Are you client number 9?

  74. People signed an agreement by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 1

    So stop complaining.... Seriously, whether or not we like the current policies, they are in place, and when you purchased your iphone originally, you agreed to it.

    Here is my issue, if they are going to charge existing customers full priced, then the phone should be unlocked, plain and simple. But ATT and its shitty policies won't even let you unlock your phone after your contract has expired....

    --
    I came, I conquered, I coredumped
    1. Re:People signed an agreement by Savior_on_a_Stick · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's very easy to get your phone unlocked by ATT.
      I've done this for several of our people who travel overseas to gsm areas not covered by roaming agreements.
      All it takes is a phone call.

  75. Re:READ THE ARTICLE, FOOL! by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1

    You are provably wrong. I have a current iPhone. My contract runs out in November. I was given the discount when I ordered a 3GS phone today.

  76. this is why we can't have nice things by saiha · · Score: 1

    What a sickening sense of entitlement. I have an iPhone (1st gen) and I'm going to get this upgrade but I probably wouldn't if I had the 3G already.

    Anyway without spending a dime on a new phone everyone will get the software v3.

    1. Re:this is why we can't have nice things by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      What a sickening sense of entitlement.

      Welcome to the World of Apple. Me, after I sold my Apple //e a quarter century ago I haven't looked back.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  77. The Pre is looking better by docbrody · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't have a problem with what AT&T is doing. I get their logic. But for me personally, this is one more reason that I might just go ahead and try out the Pre. (the other reason is because it works with iTunes). I will miss my Apps, but at least my iPhone will effectively be an iTouch.

    I guess AT&T has figured this in. The only reason to give a discount to upgraders would be to lock them in for another 2 years. I guess they figured that enough people will pay full price or stick it out until the end of their contract that they don't need to provide an incentive - not now anyway. They might be right... im not even sure what i will do myself yet (have not looked into what ATT cancellation fees will be, how long Sprint will try to lock me in, etc).

    1. Re:The Pre is looking better by Ziwcam · · Score: 2, Interesting

      (the other reason is because it works with iTunes).

      For now... There's no telling what Apple will do (intentionally or not) to break that functionality in the future.

  78. Same with RIM...its called a contract. by malcreado · · Score: 1

    Blackberry did the same thing with the storm.

  79. Boo effing hoo by scubamage · · Score: 1

    Seriously, boohoo. No other carrier offers discounts on ANY phone midway through your plan. Suck it up and pay the extra 200$. Just because its an iphone doesn't make you special and exempt from company policies. If it did, well, I'll take a 99$ palm pre then thank you.

  80. Blackberry is a Leash, iPhone is a Brush by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    The blackberry is built from the top down to keep you connected to the corporation.

    While you can do that with an iPhone to if you wish, many more people just use it as the tool smartphones are intended to be. The same is true of other newer smartphones like Android and Pre, they let you create the connectivity model and directionality you desire.

    The leash you despise is one that you choose to allow. It doesn't mean you can't use the rope for better things if you wish since you hold both ends.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Blackberry is a Leash, iPhone is a Brush by DaMattster · · Score: 1

      My point was simply that we have gotten way too complex as a society and it would be good to simplify things. I can see the real value of a cell phone for basic things like text and talk. In fact, I don't know how I got on without it and I do feel naked if I forget my cell phone. They are excellent safety devices as well. But, I think in these economic times, spending money where one needs/has to is better than the, IMHO, frivolousness of the iPhone. Plus, the cost of the iPhone service is ridiculous and I don't know where AT&T gets off by charging such exhorbitant amounts of money. Not enough competition in the cellular market.

  81. usury. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually, the terms were *always* onerous and unfair. It's just that there was never a phone available that really made people say "i want that" often enough to notice that they were getting shafted.

    Now the iPhone is out and it's become the banner to rally behind.

    Frankly, I think it's too much for the phone companies to be allowed to sell the phones. They've shown they can't play fair when they have that ball. Twice. Once with the regular phone market, and now with the cellular phone market.

    They probably ought to be forbidden at this point from selling the phones at all. If people want to finance their phones that should be their own business.

    1. Re:usury. by MrCrassic · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm not arguing about fairness here. In fact, I think that the subsidies administered by cell phone providers are inflated a bit too high. I'm just stating that those who are complaining about this practice should have done a bit of their own homework, at the very least.

      A common practice is a common practice.

    2. Re:usury. by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      The only problem I see is the apple mind set of abandoning older platforms. I would suspect that within a year the iPhone I have will no longer be supported by most apps on the app store. Hell it's getting harder and harder to find apps for OSX 10.4.

    3. Re:usury. by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      I might agree with you if the cell phone companies actually had to keep up their end of the contract. I am no longer with AT&T because when they were bought by Cingular, they started cutting service to the existing AT&T customers. Their response to me when I called about it was that they would restore my service if I paid more money for less minutes and signed a new two year contract. The best I was able to get out of them was to cancel the existing contract. Fulfilling their end of the contract was simply not on the table for them.

    4. Re:usury. by jone1941 · · Score: 1

      I am definitely not going to outright disagree with your comment. Apple has been notorious good at convincing developers to use the new APIs with each new OS X release. This is different from saying Apple doesn't support 10.4, the issue is that developers have been lured by something in 10.5 that makes supporting 10.4 more difficult.

      This is kind of a double edged sword. Arguably, as an operating system developer they are in the business of providing new (better) developer tools with each iteration of the OS. The return on that investment is that developers use those new tools to make it necessary for consumers to buy that new OS (see your comment). The fact that they need recurring revenues means that they can either charge the developers, you or both. Right now apple runs the path of charging the consumer and gives away the developer tools (yes I know I'm ignoring the fact that they make money on the hardware as well). The point is, either your hardware is outdated (according to Apple) or you are unwilling to purchase a newer copy of OS X which will allow you to run the latest greatest apps. Also, while 10.4 is clearly not that old, it was first released about 4 years ago and hasn't had a minor point release in about 2 years. Developers only choose to maintain support for the older version of an operating system if there are users for it. If I had to take a guess I'd say people willing to pay for something still running 10.4 represent a very small majority.

      The iPhone is a slightly different beast. With each new revision of the hardware they provide new features (3G, GPS, Compass, improved camera etc). However, they also continue to release new software updates for the various phones they release. Thus far the OS releases have been as much about user facing features as they have been about developer APIs. Since they have a recurring revenue model (by getting a slice of the AT&T monthly contract) they are able to subsidize the software development and can continue to make money from the app store by keeping as large an install base as possible. At some point they will see less value in supporting the old versions of the iPhone (because less people have them) and as a result they will choose not to support those devices with the new update to their operating system.

      The question that remains to be seen is just how long they are actually willing to provide software updates to previous versions of the iPhone. Much like the primary OS X development, at some point the old phones simply won't be able to keep up with the OS upgrades or the cost to maintain support for them will overtake the profits that can be seen from the app store. At that point support will be dropped for those older phones. Fortunately the first two revisions had identical CPU and RAM specs, so they probably won't drop the original iPhone until they drop the current iPhone 3G. If I was being optimistic I'd say that we'll probably get another 3 years of OS upgrades for these devices. Though, I'd guess the differences between each upgrade will probably not be very substantial since with version 3.0 the vast majority of people's prayers have been answered.

      --
      Fear trumps hope and ignorance trumps both
    5. Re:usury. by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      I'd be willing to argue that phone companies should be allowed to sell phones at retail but never as a lock-in or service-assisted purchase. They can even lease me the phone as an additional fee on my service contract if they want, that's fine. I'd have no problem with that. Its the fact that I am almost forced to purchase a phone with an attached contract that bothers me.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    6. Re:usury. by WCguru42 · · Score: 1

      They probably ought to be forbidden at this point from selling the phones at all. If people want to finance their phones that should be their own business.

      I'm not going to go as far as you and say that they shouldn't be allowed to sell phones, but, like in the past when AT&T got the smack down from the FCC, they should be forbidden from keeping outside phones from competing in the market. This means no special deals on third party phones, no restrictions beyond requiring proper compatibility with the cell network. Is this going to happen? No. None of the carriers have enough market dominance to get the big stick, but they probably all deserve it.

      --
      "Educate the mind but never at the expense of the soul."~Blessed Basil Moreau
    7. Re:usury. by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Do the apps you have stop working? No? Then what's the problem?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    8. Re:usury. by NovaHorizon · · Score: 1

      they could reduce their prices if they stopped selling phones also. Every day each company spends at least 10's of thousands in replacing phones that were warrantied due to bad troubleshooting (and having to repurchase the phone from the manufacturer for sending a phone for a problem not covered by warranty) or replacing with a new phone (customer complained waayy too much) or in selling the phone for $200 less to gain a 2 year contract.

    9. Re:usury. by wintermute000 · · Score: 1

      Yes but this is somewhat alleviated by the fact that anything from 2006 and later - heck even powerPC G5s - run leopard fine.

      I am a 'recent' apple user (only bought my white macbook, 10.4 a year and a half ago) and recently upgraded to leopard due to the issues you've described above. Half expecting a xp --> vista type debacle, I was pleasantly surprised at how seamless it was. Heck even my dellmini9 with an Atom runs leopard fine. I fully expect to run snow leopard and the next one perfectly OK, by which time it will be kicking on 4 years and time to upgrade the HW.

      They ARE good at making sure their old HW runs their latest SW, I know people running it on G5 imacs who have no complaints. Of course you're shelling out for the software upgrade, but at least they make sure its easily done. The contrast with MS and PCs (heck even linux and PCs.... ever relied on a distro upgrade via yum, apt-get or whatever? GAH)... is astounding.

    10. Re:usury. by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      Well, maybe a app I use has a security bug, and the developer decides to update it by requiring the new hardware. Then what?

      A perfect example can be seen in OS X. If you use java and you don't have OS X 10.5 you are basically screwed because at some point the security updates for the apps you use are going to require a version of java you can never have. Probably sooner then later.

      I'm not saying this is a bad thing. I like how nimble apple can be at the cost of making everyone buy a new computer every few years (of course like everyone else, I'm not a fan of paying for it). I will probably be getting a new iPhone anyway because my wife wants one.

      I'm just stating that if the majority of apps on the app store don't work on phones over a year or two old then the iPhone is going to lose my support as a platform. Now they have not said anything to the effect of dropping support. But it's not up to them really, it's up to the app developers.

    11. Re:usury. by hmar · · Score: 1

      Apple has once in its history abandoned an outdated platform. I can still get all the apps I need for my 10.3 computers at work. The difference is the features of the OS itself, not compatibility. The few apps that require 10.4.x or higher (or 10.5.x) are not made by apple, they are made by third parties utilizing new features in the OS. This happens on the Windows platform even more often than Apple, many apps requiring a certain level of service pack to operate. My guess is that the app store won't have this problem anywhere near as much, as Apple retains tight control on the apps sold. I do not understand why people perceive this as an "apple thing"

    12. Re:usury. by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      Does apple provide security updates to java on 10.3 still?

    13. Re:usury. by hmar · · Score: 1

      When did Apple provide Java updates?

    14. Re:usury. by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      Link me a sun download of java. Apple has a contract with sun where they develop and distribute all java updates for OS X. So when apple decided to freeze java at 1.4 then you are screwed.

      Case in point OSX 10.3 is stuck at java 1.4. When apple decides it's done with an OS it's done. They don't give much warning. They just announce it like it's a feature.

      I am an apple user and I love OSX 10.5. But I hate apple.

    15. Re:usury. by hmar · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected. A quick visit to http://www.java.com/en/download/manual.jsp shows that Java for Apple does, indeed, need to come from Apple. What I don't get, is why, as Apple still updates OS 10.3, they would not provide Java. Is that Apple's decision, or Sun's? honest question, not fanboism

    16. Re:usury. by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      As far as I know sun does not care what version of java apple ships. It would be in sun's best interest if apple ships the latest version.

      So I would think that apple chooses not to update java to the latest releases in order to push sales to their latest operating systems.

  82. US cellphone contracts are barmy by argent · · Score: 1

    US cellphone contracts are barmy. We know that.

    Why you think they'll be any less barmy for iPhone renters than Nokia renters, I have no idea. It's the nature of the beast.

  83. Ignore Apple Hater Spin, you can now buy plan free by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Apple Haters make a big deal out of the standard carrier practice of subsidizing phones and therefore making you pay extra to leave your contract early.

    Smarter posters would note that the pricing is as expected, only now you don't have to go to Hong Kong to buy a phone with no commitment. Now the thing to clarify is if these are still carrier locked (sadly probably so) but this is how you avoid a fee in the future if you are worried about it...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  84. Me too by Locke2005 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I have a similar problem. I got married a few years ago, but now thr old lady is looking a little worse for wear, and there are much younger and hotter models avaailable now! But my lawyer tells me I have an implicit "contract", and that upgrading will cost me big bucks! WTF! This is so unfair! They should have warned mme in advance how expensive it would be to trade up! Or maybe they did, but I wwas so excited with my shiny new toy to notice... either way, I'm mad as hell and I' going to bitch and moan until I get my way!

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    1. Re:Me too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a problem i do have with at&t is my family had a family plan with cell one or who ever it was that was eaten up by at&t and to change anything we all had to get new phones. once two of the five phones stopped working we had to sign a new contract with at&t as well as replace the phones we had. The only complaint i had with my phone was it needed a new battery relatively cheap. so to get a new phone that had the one feature i really wanted, mp3 player built in with micro sd card reader, i had to get a new fancy phone that had all sorts of tricks i did not want or need and i had to pay for them and pay even more if i ever wanted to use them. even with the new service discount i ended up getting charged $150 for a phone that effectively did less, it has some software limitation that wont let it play mp3s as ring tones unless they are under 1 min, and none of the cheaper phones had the same battery so i couldnt just get a chepo and change the sim card and battery into the old phone. i was even able to use the new at&t sim card in my old phone to transfer my phone book. i dont know about you but i only want a phone that makes phone calls and not much else. what ever this blue tooth/gps/internet/ kitchen sink thing is i dont even make that many calls the mp3 player gets more use than the phone feature of the phone.

    2. Re:Me too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sticky keyboard, eh?

    3. Re:Me too by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      Typed on an Android G1 phone while sitting at McDonald's... yes, I do better with a real keyboard and a screen I can actually see.

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    4. Re:Me too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You bought your wife at AT&T too?

    5. Re:Me too by Savior_on_a_Stick · · Score: 1

      Do like people do with expensive broken cell phones - insure it, wait a respectable length of time, then toss her down a well.

      You could also resell her and potentially recoup some of your outlay, but that's a bit more risky.

  85. Easy peasy by krotscheck · · Score: 1

    'We have to mount a vigorous campaign to change this policy.'

    There's an App for that.

    --
    This signature can save you $400 on your car insurance!
  86. Half subsidy by cybereal · · Score: 4, Informative

    Actually what is being offered is a compromise. The full retail value of the 32 GB model is $699 not $499. AT&T is offering those iPhone owners who purchased their 3G upgrade last year, under the terms of a 2 year subsidization contract, the opportunity for a special upgrade at half the subsidization cost. So, for example, when I bought my iPhone 3G last year on day 1, even though I promised to complete an entire two year contract to cover the major discount offered at the time, I will still be able to restart a new two year contract and be rewarded with a $200 discount.

    So even though those with no further contract obligations (actually, in many cases you can upgrade at full discount after only 18 months of your 24 month contract) and those new purchasers will get a nice $400 discount, I think I'm getting a pretty honest deal with a half discount halfway through the obligation.

    However, many people are clearly confused for various reasons. One cause is likely that many of these iPhone customers were never smartphone customers before. These people had no idea just how much money smartphones cost MSRP. The other part of it is original iPhone (Edge) buyers were not subsidized at all, and when the 3G came around, the offer was presented as though it was a special situation allowing for an early upgrade. Well that is partly factual, if you wanted to upgrade to any other phone you would not have been able to at only one year. I find this aspect to be particularly disgusting on AT&T's part, but it's all part of the contract... At any rate, since there was no subsidization in the original two year contracts for AT&T to cover, it was a no-brainer for them to offer full subsidization to 3G purchasers.

    So ultimately, many people are expecting to get exactly the same full subsidization "special" offer they got with the 3G but there has never once been any promise that they would.

    So I say: If you're not happy with the pricing, don't buy the new phone. If you feel bad about the whole situation, at least try to fully comprehend what happened and why the 3G's subsidization was not nearly as special as it seemed (AT&T sacrificed zero subsidization from your original contract whereas now they are offering to sacrifice half of the one from the 3G). It's understandable to be dissatisfied with an offer regardless of the terms, but not understandable for people to go all emo over the terms as though they were somehow owed or promised something else when they obviously weren't.

    For the record, I intend to pick up a 32gb upgrade for $500 because frankly, I was happy to buy the original 8gb for the full original price. To me it's valuable for the added space alone. Everyone has to make this decision for themselves obviously but at least have the character to realize you are not being ripped off, and you are not somehow owed a better offer just because you really want the phone.

    Fandom does not make you special.

    --
    I read the script, and I think it would help my character's motivation if he was on fire. -Bender
    1. Re:Half subsidy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything you say is true, but you forget one very important detail -- the phone you're getting is NOT unlocked! There's no way an AT&T-only phone is worth $699.

    2. Re:Half subsidy by Adair · · Score: 1

      I was pretty mad about this at first, but after reading a lot of the comments here I have changed my thinking.

      What really irritated me was after getting the announcement email from Apple, excitedly reading it, and seeing the pricetag for a 32GB model at $299, I was all set to buy it thinking, man that's a pretty good deal. So I click the link, enter my current AT&T plan data and wait for the page to load. Then it tells me the best I qualify for is $499 for the 32GB model. I just sat there, shocked. The text told me the soonest I would qualify for the $299 price would be January, 2010. It's not that I don't think the new iPhone 32GB model isn't worth $500... it's that the $299 pricetag was flashed around in my face several times before I got into the shopping cart. Then I felt like I was hit with a big FU stick. I was pissed. If they'd said $499 from the beginning there would have been no shock when I logged in.

      Having said all that, I've now read a lot of the comments here on /. and it's given me some time to think. Yeah, $499 is not absurd for the product they're offering. I can only imagine the cost of R&D for some of this stuff. I, too, was one who paid full, hefty price for the original iPhone, then upgraded to the 3G within two months of it coming out and at a fairly decent purchase price. Part of me thinks that if I'm RE-signing a new 2-year contract with AT&T then why shouldn't I get the special $299 super-noob rate. The other part of me knows that it's because AT&T already knows they have me on contract and they have more to gain by getting new subscribers than they have to worry about losing existing ones. I'm a capitalist so I can understand that.

      A lot of people have made sense here so I thank the /. posters for grounding my wild anger at the $200 difference between "advertised" price and real price. I just wish they had been more honest up front about $299 being only for new subscribers. You see $299, then go to check out and see $499... obvious reaction is WTF? But I love my iPhone and I really like Apple and AT&T has been pretty decent in my experience and I really don't want the government to have to bail out / take over either of them, so I'm sinking the $499!

    3. Re:Half subsidy by octover · · Score: 1

      I agree, some of these complaints are pathetic. No one is getting bait and switched ripped off. Though I wonder if the $699 is unsubsidized then why do customers have to sign a new 2 year agreement? I thought the whole point of contracts was so the carrier could get back the investment of subsidizing your phone. You can get a iPod touch for $399, so I believe $699 for the phone is probably full retail as you say.

      Based on that and the lack of MMS and tethering support out of the gate makes me say AT&T is dropping the ball. Apple should get serious about developers being able to have devices for testing without having to have a bunch of unnecessary monthly phone contracts. I would happily pay full retail to get something unlocked so I can pop in a local SIM card when I travel, but again not an option (there are options, but you can only get an iPhone serviced in the country of purchase according to the warranty, I did read it and decided it wasn't worth the money to import an unlocked phone from elsewhere in the EU). My carrier is more than happy to let me call using Skype on their 3G network, but because AT&T in the US says no I'm prevented from functionality that even some of the free with contract phones have here in Sweden.

    4. Re:Half subsidy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, how long have you worked for AT&T? :)

      They could just tack the remaining 6 months onto the new 2-year contracts and get a lot of happy iPhone users to upgrade. The fact that they're trying to spin this as a "valued customer" discount without explaining any full price / subsidy intricacies says they just don't get the average wireless customer. I don't care how many journal entries or torturous twists of logic AT&T comes up with to justify this pricing. The fact is it a) has not been explained well by AT&T and b) AT&T has not only not offered pricing that feels like a deal to the average iPhone user, it's not even prepared to support the phone it's going to sell. And c) would be that AT&T overcharges for the data, text messaging, and rate plans compared to other carriers. That is nothing new, though - AT&T has always overcharged for services.

      Regardless of any "logic," most customer purchases contain at least some element of emotion. The reaction to this situation is proof that AT&T doesn't have loyal customers; they have iPhones. When the iPhones leave, so will they.

    5. Re:Half subsidy by Deanalator · · Score: 1

      Here's the thing though, it costs 150 to get out of an att contract (last I checked). So canceling your att contract right before you buy your new phone will save you 50 dollars, but it's more hassle. I don't understand how things like cellphone contracts and the exclusivity contracts between apple and att are even legal. They seem like the very definition of "anti-competitive" to me.

      Furthermore, doubling the price because someone is already a customer? What they should have said is that the new iPhones are 400 dollars, and there is a special 200 dollar price for first time buyers.

  87. Why don't you organize a strike by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    instead of whining on Slashdot? I have a crap T-mobile pre-paid Samsung and I'm keeping it just because the iPhone's mandatory data plan stinks (screw you Jobs.) Besides, the iPhone is too heavy and too expensive to treat the way you should be able to treat a phone. I've been spoiled by Western Electric.

  88. The phone subsidy is a reason for the contract by anexkahn · · Score: 1

    Apple is the one charging $500 for the Iphone. ATT then gives you a $200 subsidy to buy it as an incentive to sign a 2 year contract. If AT&T were to let people upgrade their phone at the subsidized cost anytime they wanted to, they could stand to loose a lot of money. I agree with AT&T on this one. Check out what the Early Termination Fee(ETF) is...I would bet it is less than $200. You could always pay the ETF, then get your iphone at the subsidized cost.

    --
    Curious about Storage and Virtualization? Check out
  89. Non-issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This has been AT&T's upgrade policy for years. You will have to pony up the full price of a new phone, regardless of who makes it, if you want one before the 2 year contract has expired. iPhone users need to quit whining.

  90. Don't feel bad, it will be worse for Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lots of carriers have announced their policy. I am suspecting Rogers in Canada is taking its time to garuantee that it will have the absolute worst possible price

  91. no monthly reduction after 2 years = no discount by teletoca · · Score: 1

    If the phone company is asking me to sign a two year commitment to repay the "discount" they gave me on the phone, after the two year period, shouldn't they then reduce my monthly bill after I've paid back the "discount" ? They don't, so I call bullshit that they were giving me a discount in the first place.

  92. Give me a break already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is the same for every cell provider out there. The phone price is subsidized based on new contracts or renewal of expiring contracts. Quit bitching already.

  93. Welcome to the USA. by IcePop456 · · Score: 1

    Seems like the average joe/jane only believes in contracts when they get ALL the benefits with no downside. Don't get me wrong, I think there needs to be some more checks and balances with the carriers, but a contract is a contract. If you don't agree to it, don't sign it. If you don't care to read and understand it (or can't understand it - find help!) that's your own damn fault! Only in the USA can we blame everyone else for our own problems.

    My mortgage...how was I supposed to know that I can't afford to live next to a wealthy CEO even though I have an entry level job. Must be the someone else fault I got myself into that situation without even giving it a rational thought!

    Too good to be true? Not if the village idiot can convince the village to follow them

  94. A possible compromise by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So the issue is that a new model has been released and only people who are eligible for a new phone can get it at a discount? Apple never should have caved on the iphone price change retroactivity, now they can't improve anything without the existing users demanding free upgrades for life.

    Yup. All you get by caving in to pressure is more pressure. I'd expound, but I'd fail at Godwin. ;)

    I know the iPhone crowd is somewhat enriched in whiny emos and self-entitled types (before anyone flames, I said *enriched*, not that it describes all of them), but still - what other community would react with such moral outrage that they have to actually live up to their contract? Under what scenario did they think they would be eligible for a *subsidized* upgrade for no reason?

    The winning strategy for Apple/AT&T is to charge them $20 to switch phones, put their contract back to two years, and charge them the new subscriber price plus the pro-rated portion of the discount on their remaining contract. So if they've been under contract for a year out of the two, give them half the discount, add $20 to switch the service, and put them back at a year. The consumer gets a fair deal and AT&T and Apple make money.

    1. Re:A possible compromise by bertoelcon · · Score: 1

      The consumer gets a fair deal and AT&T and Apple make money.

      Or just AT&T and Apple make money, no reason to be fair.

      --
      Anything can be found funny, from a certain point of view.
  95. But, by edalytical · · Score: 1, Funny

    what about those of us who bought the iPhone at full cost ($599) the first week it was released. Why the fuck do we have to pay the same monthly fee as if we were paying for the more recent subsidized phones? Why do I have to pay for unlimited Data when I'v never used more than 500 MB in a month? (Why does EDGE suck so bad? Why does it never work when I need directions or a phone number?) Why the fuck do I have to pay for minutes I never use? Why can't I apply my rollover minutes as credits toward my phone bill? Why do I love my phone, buy hate everything about my service? Why am I stupid enough to pay $900 a year for service that is so flaky?

    Unless AT&T can address my concerns, I don't really care how much the subsidized phone costs. Unless the TCO can come down to a reasonable price and the data features actually work when I need them, I will not be renewing my contract -- not even for a new subsidized phone.

    I'd rather pay for the hardware and decent service than to keep throwing away money at service that doesn't meet my needs.

    --
    Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    1. Re:But, by myyrk · · Score: 2, Funny

      what about those of us who bought the iPhone at full cost ($599) the first week it was released. Why the fuck do we have to pay the same monthly fee as if we were paying for the more recent subsidized phones? Why do I have to pay for unlimited Data when I'v never used more than 500 MB in a month? (Why does EDGE suck so bad? Why does it never work when I need directions or a phone number?) Why the fuck do I have to pay for minutes I never use? Why can't I apply my rollover minutes as credits toward my phone bill? Why do I love my phone, buy hate everything about my service? Why am I stupid enough to pay $900 a year for service that is so flaky?

      Unless AT&T can address my concerns, I don't really care how much the subsidized phone costs. Unless the TCO can come down to a reasonable price and the data features actually work when I need them, I will not be renewing my contract -- not even for a new subsidized phone.

      I'd rather pay for the hardware and decent service than to keep throwing away money at service that doesn't meet my needs.

      You answered your own question with a question:

      Why am I stupid ...

      you are just too stupid to realize it.

    2. Re:But, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *woosh*

  96. It's the consequence of being a corporate slave... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Me, I got one at the Apple store and within minutes it was on the T-mobile network...

    Apple got my money in exchange for a great product... AT&T adds no value (and has not since 1969 or so.)

    AT&T should (and probably will) go the way of the dodo http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dodo like many other great brands that today only their brand name carries a value.

  97. Confused Definition by afabbro · · Score: 4, Insightful

    'This is ridiculous and slap in the face to long-time loyal iPhone customers like me who switched from T-Mobile and the only reason was the iPhone,' writes one unhappy iPhone customer.

    Long-time? Even if you bought an iPhone the day it was released (June 29, 2007), you are not yet at the end of your initial 2-year contract. How "long-time loyal" can you be?

    --
    Advice: on VPS providers
    1. Re:Confused Definition by parliboy · · Score: 1

      Cingular, which morphed into AT&T, is/was the only cell provider I have had in my entire life. I have a 3G. How bout a little love for my loyalty?

      --
      "You're never ready, just less unprepared."
    2. Re:Confused Definition by zieroh · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind that the first iPhone wasn't subsidized by contract terms. Existing AT&T customers who bought iPhones on day 1 (I was one of them) paid full price, and were not obligated to sign any contract. Instead, I merely used my existing account and continued to pay the (slightly higher) monthly bill.

      I've actually been eligible for an upgrade for somewhere around two years now, and today it paid off.

      --
      People who say "sheeple" have about as much sophistication as an AOL user, and in fact are probably actually AOL users.
    3. Re:Confused Definition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you bought the original iPhone at any point, you paid an unsubsidized price AND you had to sign a 2-year contract. That is why when the iPhone 3G was released, AT&T allowed current iPhone owners fully subsidized pricing no matter where they were in their contract. If you still have the original, you should be able to to upgrade to the 3GS at the lowest price.

  98. Cheaper Just to Pay Early Termination Fee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ETF is $175 and you get $5 reduced from that each month. So after 12 months your early termination fee is only $175-60 = $115. Cancel your account and start up a new one and get your new iPhone for $199+115 = $314 instead of $399. Of course you might lose your phone number in the process...

    1. Re:Cheaper Just to Pay Early Termination Fee by Hitiek · · Score: 1

      Ditto. Exactly what I was going to post.

    2. Re:Cheaper Just to Pay Early Termination Fee by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      The problem is that you already had to pay the service. And ETFs in some states are not legal. The point is that they won't sell it to you unless you are near the end of your 24 month contract or a new customer where you can sign another 24 month contract.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
  99. Not FAIR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Mom...It's not fair.!.!.! His phone is newer than mine. It has a compass! Call AT&T and demand that they give me the new phone at a discount. You will, like, buy it for me, right, even if they don't give me the discount."

    Mom, "Of course Dear."

  100. Oh JEEZ! Quit your bitching, babies! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All you whiny bastards complaining about the cost of the upgrade, keep whining long enough and you'll get exactly what you want: Instead of the subsidized $200.00 price tag for an iPhone, you'll pay $600.00. Sure, you won't be LOCKED IN to a contact (OMG! The HORROR of paying for a service you ASKED FOR), but you'll also NEVER get that sweet discount that you're now bitching that you only get once every two years.

    I've got an iPhone 3G. Sure, I want the 3GS. Heck, I want one badly. But I knew when I signed on that in exchange for my 2-year commitment, AT&T was paying for $400.00 of my $600.00 phone. And you whiny bitches knew it too! Stop being such pansy-ass titty babies and own up to the fact that someone paid $400.00 of your purchase, and now you're pissing and moaning because they won't do it again when you're SPECIFICALLY begging them to do it so you can fail to honor your end of the deal you signed.

    Me, I'll wait for next June. There'll be an even cooler iPhone then, I'll be out of my contract, and you know what? I'll happily let AT&T pay $400.00 of the cost of THAT phone in exchange for agreeing to hang around using the coolest piece of consumer electronics I've ever handled.

    Sheesh... you all know you're bitching out of your asses. Man up and respect your end of the deal you KNEW you were signing.

  101. devil pact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People are stupid. They enter into contracts with the devil and then are surprised they got screwed. Apple and Microsoft are the worst companies to do business with. Even if their products were really good (they aren't) you are making a pact with the devil! How stupid can you be.

  102. I don't have a contract by HermMunster · · Score: 1

    I don't have a contract yet I still would be required to pay the full price. I use the go phone plan. I've kept my phone active for nearly every month the phone has been available. This is nearly 24 months. At $100.00 a month that's $2400 for the service and $400 for the phone. That's almost $3,000.

    At that price NO ONE should be supporting AT&T nor Apple.

    It is crazy to think that AT&T (and Apple) would limit the people that can purchase the phones. The only reason is to get you to pay for another 24 month contract.

    Where's the support from the lawmakers when it comes to companies such as AT&T ripping off customers so badly?

    --
    You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    1. Re:I don't have a contract by DaMattster · · Score: 1

      I've got a GoPhone too and I like it because AT&T doesn't own me! I am in the driver's seat and I control my costs. This is the way it should be. The telecom industry has enough lobbyists that it purchases its protections. No senator/congressman dare press King Telecom.

    2. Re:I don't have a contract by WillyWanker · · Score: 1

      Cause I'm sure AT&T forced you to spend $3000 for cell phone service using mafioso-style tactics. Wait... you weren't forced into buying a $400 PHONE and spending another $100 a month to use it??? Better would be a law stopping people from whining about the astronomical prices they willingly pay for crap they don't really need. Now THAT'S a bill I would support.

    3. Re:I don't have a contract by zieroh · · Score: 1

      I don't have a contract yet I still would be required to pay the full price. I use the go phone plan. I've kept my phone active for nearly every month the phone has been available. This is nearly 24 months. At $100.00 a month that's $2400 for the service and $400 for the phone. That's almost $3,000.

      At that price NO ONE should be supporting AT&T nor Apple.

      Well, there's an easy solution to that problem, but it involves signing a contract. Apparently, you'd rather whine.

      --
      People who say "sheeple" have about as much sophistication as an AOL user, and in fact are probably actually AOL users.
  103. I refuse to pay for high fashion by C_Kode · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I refuse to pay the idiot premium on high fashion items, and that is exactly what Apple's products are.

    Someone that the actual value of the 32GB is $699 so you're still getting a deal. I bought my Thinkpad Z61e that I'm posting this comment with for $650. I don't think there is a phone on the planet worth $700. To even make that excuse is lame.

    I'll stick with whatever device does what I want it too without spending laptop money on it.

    1. Re:I refuse to pay for high fashion by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 4, Funny

      I refuse to pay the idiot premium on high fashion items, and that is exactly what Apple's products are.

      Because my MacBook's BSD based kernel goes great with my Dolce and Gabanna sun glasses and my MacBook's user security just absolutely matches DKNY's latest for the 09 season.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    2. Re:I refuse to pay for high fashion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could get either of those things with.... a real BSD.

      You use a Mac for the shiny buttons and rounded windows.

      Noob.

    3. Re:I refuse to pay for high fashion by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      I use it because it has real apps.

      Unlike BSD.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    4. Re:I refuse to pay for high fashion by paralaxcreations · · Score: 1

      And, you know, software.

      But who needs software when you have an OS!

    5. Re:I refuse to pay for high fashion by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      You're so right. I was thinking that most people bought Apple machines because they're "cool", but the last time I was in the Apple store all I heard people talking about were the BSD kernel and user security.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    6. Re:I refuse to pay for high fashion by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      When I was last there people were talking about how nice they were to use and how Safari didn't shit itself every five minutes.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    7. Re:I refuse to pay for high fashion by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      Someone should tell them Safari, and good browsers in general, aren't exclusive to Macs. That's like buying a car because you like the chrome wheels.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    8. Re:I refuse to pay for high fashion by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      Clearly not, but, if the alternatives are Linux and Windows...

      Well...

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  104. Why AT&T customers should REALLY be pissed off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AT&T is dragging its feet in implementing MMS, so that new feature will not be ready at launch for AT&T customers in the US. Not only that, but AT&T is also not going to implement tethering (at least for the time being) for US cusotmers. Just wait for AT&T to ass rape you on tethering prices when that feature is also supported.

  105. The problem is advertising. by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

    Apple advertised the price of the 3GS as 199/299 at the keynote, and didn't mention the unsubsidized price.

    I really don't think we should haul them into court for false advertising, but, we should at least reserve the right to feel burned by the big price point that was driven home at the WWDC keynote.

    --
    Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  106. HAHAHAHAHAHAHA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    HAHA! Grow up, you got an expencive phone for cheap in the first place, the new one wont be /that/ much better! suck it up and get a cool new phone next year

  107. So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was going to suggest that maybe AT&T should offer the new model with a contract extension, but if the contracts are two years of service for a device line that upgrades every year, that could get ugly.

    So, then, just wait until next year when the even cooler model comes out, and today's 3GS users are stuck in the middle of their contracts. Who'll be fat'n'happy then?

  108. Re:Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A) The G1 can't do more than the iPhone can. It's a buggy piece of crap that has trash application support and a laggy, poorly coded base OS.
    B) The G1 is pretty much the single ugliest phone on the face of the planet, with the worst form-factor to EVER come from the sidekick team.
    C) You're so jealous it shows.
    D) There's an app for people like you.

  109. Big fat hairy-assed deal! by bXTr · · Score: 1

    This was the policy since the company was still known as Cingular. You want a new phone cheap, sign a two year contract. Already on a two year contract, wait until about three months before it expires, or pay the full price. Don't want to do that, then DIE, PLEASE.

    --
    It's a very dark ride.
  110. The HORROR!!! by WillyWanker · · Score: 1

    Clearly it's a sign of the Apocalypse when an Apple fanboi isn't willing to spend ridiculous amounts of money on substandard hardware with an asinine number of restrictions. Worse, he's not even thanking Apple and AT&T for the privilege!

    My God, what's next?!?! Best Buy not charging 3x more than everyone else?!?!?! Microsoft selling Windows 7 for less than what you're entire computer system costs?!?!?!?! The RIAA being spanked by the US Supreme Court and forced to refund all the extortion money they've collected from innocent civilians?!?!?!?!?!?!?!? Oh the HORROR!!! THE HORROR!!!

  111. Re:Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

    I would of gotten a G1, except T-Mobile doesn't have 3G network anywhere I go. The nearest one is Chicago. ATT has 3g EVERYWHERE I go.

    Hmmmmm....G1 wont' work on att 3g networks.....what to pick....

  112. Here's how to avoid the ETF. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    COST THEM MONEY, and they will drop you. Here's how to do it.

    1) Call customer support, EVERY DAY. Each call costs them at least $25, because they outsource it.

    2) Have free roaming? Start roaming. Costs them big bux.

    Do this, and trust me, they will glad to be rid of you.

    1. Re:Here's how to avoid the ETF. by CountBrass · · Score: 1

      You seem to have missed the step where you convert this "harassment" into AT&T cancelling your contract for free.

      Or is this the usual step in such processes where "a miracle happens" and fixes everything?

      --
      Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
  113. Like it matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its not gunna stop the sheeple from shelling out their money.

  114. This is annoying as a developer by dleute · · Score: 1

    I understand the policy with the public. But as an iPhone developer, being forced to shell out extra money to have the new hardware is frustrating. With the public it's a choice. With developers some of us have to test on the new hardware. I wish there were a middle ground.

    1. Re:This is annoying as a developer by dleute · · Score: 1

      Ah, but the car manufacturer doesn't require you to be compatible with their new cars.

      Apple requires that our software works on all OS 3.0 devices. As iPhone developers, we literally have no choice. You can choose to support only the older models for bracket mounts. But your 2.2 software has to work on all devices with greater than 2.2 software and hardware.

      Granted, most things "just work". However, I was hit hard by an iPod touch bug and a similar 2g vs 3g iPhone location services bug.

      Honestly, the real answer is not to have subsidies in the first place. It's a stupid commercial opportunity that unnecessarily complicates the entire phone system. But it's what we have. I probably would have chosen an unsubsidized option at a higher price for the phone if such a thing existed (legally). And then I would be able to upgrade without *feeling* like I'm being taxed as a loyal apple customer.

      It would be nice if apple had a paid/cheaper service for iPhone developers with minimal minutes and data for testing. But that is wishful thinking.

    2. Re:This is annoying as a developer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am in agreement with this.
      What's worse is that developers are already paying Apple $99 to develop on the actual hardware. Now we're being told that our access to the devices is being restricted, even after paying an extra fee. And it's not just a matter of paying more than new customers (as is the case with AT&T). At least one of the carriers here in Canada (Fido... probably the same with parent company Rogers) will not sell the new hardware to iPhone plan subscribers, even at an extra premium, until the their existing contracts are finished. In other words, it is literally impossible current developers to legally purchase (and hence develop for) a new iPhone 3G-S unless they subscribe to a second phone plan.

  115. Not the point. by PeterChenoweth · · Score: 1
    Smug anti-iPhoners can point and laugh at iPhone owners all they want. Par for the course around here.

    The *point* of this mess is that AT&T allowed original iPhone owners to upgrade to a 3G iPhone at any point in the contract. So if you bought an original iPhone in July of '07, you agreed to a 2-year contract. Fine. But if you decided in August of '08 that you wanted a new 3G iPhone, AT&T would sell you one at the DISCOUNTED, new-customer price. Yes, that's contrary to the way every other phone upgrade works, and part of how iPhones were sold. And yes, you got to keep the original iPhone.

    AT&T/Apple changed their mind on the 3GS upgrade policy, and *that's* what has iPhone owners ticked off. Give it a couple of weeks. My bet is that they'll change their mind on it and go back to the original policy. Especially when they see that 3GS sales aren't taking off the way they expect them to.

    1. Re:Not the point. by Silicon+Jedi · · Score: 1

      The ORIGINAL iPhone wasn't subsidized.

  116. I'm confused by MattW · · Score: 1

    You seem to be missing the all-important "?????" step... what craziness is this?

    1. Re:I'm confused by roc97007 · · Score: 0

      In this case, there is no ?????.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    2. Re:I'm confused by MikeBabcock · · Score: 0

      Blasphemy!

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  117. *Yawn* by QuoteMstr · · Score: 0

    I'll just use my nice, simple, reliable Symbian phone that does everything the iPhone, but without all the drama. What's the big deal about the iPhone, except that it's fashionable?

    Besides: I really don't like touchscreens. I much prefer physical buttons.

    1. Re:*Yawn* by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Touchscreens and hard buttons can coexist. In fact, it's the best of both worlds - you've got point & click for where it makes sense (like browsing), and yet can easily dial without looking.

  118. So What? by DarkVillain · · Score: 1

    I bought an AT&T Tilt, had problems, ended up with a Fuze. Now I find that the Touch HD or the Touch Pro 2 (Fuze 2) will be coming soon. I can't upgrade to that for the special pricing either. You can't upgrade phones for special pricing on ANY carrier. This isn't an AT&T thing, this is an industry thing. If you don't like it, don't buy a phone with subsidy, pay the full price for it, and then pay the full price when the next model comes out instead. That's the only way it's going to be "fair".

  119. there is a difference by docbrody · · Score: 1

    Its not exactly like every other carrier on the planet. AT&T has an exclusive on the iPhone. They are milking that for what its worth (and I don't really blame them). With other phones, you can switch to a new carrier to get the latest greatest shiny new phone at a huge discount. Of course that huge discount won't be so huge if you factor in the cancellation fee on your original contract... but its better than nothing.

  120. Reality Check by chill · · Score: 1

    The people who are bitching and moaning about this are total Apple Fanbois. If Steve Jobs stopped short, you'd need the jaws of life to extricate them from his ass.

    Protest all you want, but AT&T can call your bluff. What are you going to do? Not use your iPhone? Not buy another iPhone? Yeah, right. That thing you are bent over is a barrel of your own choosing. To change AT&Ts policy you'd need a credible threat to their business, and fanbois threatening to stop using their precious iPhone aren't credible.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  121. Re:READ THE ARTICLE, FOOL! by ohcrapitssteve · · Score: 1

    Many iPhone "2G"/first gen. hardware contracts are more than the approximately (maybe it's exactly?) 18 months it takes for your contract to be upgrade-eligible. The issue here is more the people who bought the iPhone first gen very late in it's life cycle, or bought into the 3G at all (since it's only been available for about 11 months.)

    Seems people just feel confused and betrayed by Apple, because those who purchased iPhone 3G phones (myself included) adopted early, and also were first gen. customers as well. Many of the people in my situation feel screwed that they have to pay an upgrade fee while new adopters get in on the iPhone 3G-S goodness for free while we've been loyal customers all along. That said, I realize it doesn't really work that way.

    I understand how subsidies work, and I realized that the iPhone 3G was released approximately 1 year after the iPhone "2G"/first gen., but maybe if I knew the iPhone would be updated again after only a year, I might not have purchased the iPhone 3G. Nevertheless, the iPhone 3G does suit my needs completely and will continue to do so until approximately January 2010 when I can upgrade to the iPhone 3G-S, or at that point, I could also just wait and see if the iPhone 4th gen is coming down the line at the one-year mark just like this one. And if so, I'll evaluate then if it's worth the additional 5 month wait.

  122. The real question is... by beej · · Score: 1

    ...when will AT&T's support for voice calling be out of beta?

  123. Sure You Can by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    Why should anyone suffer due to the absurd legal freedoms that allow all this pricing nonsense? One price to all people at all times supports the notion of equality and such a policy would bring prices down for everyone across the board. So you can blame companies for using all kinds of gimmicks in sales and stop blaming the little people on the bad end of the bargains.

  124. Re:Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A) What? Last time I checked, I had a keyboard, expandable memory, and a removable battery.
    B) Fair point, though Danger made the Sidekick, not HTC. Danger was purchased by Microsoft in 2008.

  125. What a Wonderful World it Would Be by spoonboy42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Of course, it would be lovely if we could dispense with the entire status quo wherein mobile carriers subsidize the cost of phones to lock people in to long-term contracts. I'd gladly pay more for unlocked smartphones if it meant I could pay less for service (you'd better believe the cost of all those handsets is built into your bill) and switch at-will.

    Now, it's true that you can buy some unlocked phones today, but it's far from the ideal situation for several reasons:
    1. The price of unlocked phones is substantially above the wholesale price which phones are sold to the carriers for (I don't expect a volume discount like they get, but a few hundred dollars markup is a bit steep).
    2. Some phones simply aren't available unlocked without going to the grey market, including the iPhone. That's because a lot of the most appealing phones (I'm debating an iPhone 3GS or an HTC Magic for my next) are offered as "exclusives" for a single carrier. That means that, in my region, if I want a particular phone, I'm stuck with AT&T or T-Mobile, respectively, for service.
    3. No price break on service. If you bring your own phone to play, you're still paying the extra that would cover the cost of a carrier-provided phone, which in this case is pure extra profit for the carrier.

    Now, just imagine if a similar situation existed with TVs: you only get a cool new TV when you sign up for an extended cable or satellite contract, and you're then locked into using that TV with that provider. You'd also have to consider the tradeoff between the features you want in a TV and the coverage and quality of service you get. In other words, it would be an intolerable, fragmented mess.

    But the service providers love vendor lock-in, and the phone manufacturers are only to happy to collude with them. It would probably take regulatory action to cut this particular knot. It's not impossible (remember when the FCC finally forced the mobile carriers to implement cell number portability, then they all advertised it as a great new feature), but I certainly wouldn't hold my breath for it.

    --
    Anonymous Luddite: "What do you think of the dehumanizing effects of the Internet?"
    Andy Grove: "Not Much."
    1. Re:What a Wonderful World it Would Be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am an AT&T Dealer. I sell AT&T mobile phones for a living. The wholesale price of these phones is only about $50 bucks less than what I and all other AT&T retailers sell them for without a contract. I would much rather sell a phone with a contract than without. Simple fact is I make considerable more money by selling the service than I do selling phones outright with no contract. Typical cost of a smartphone to me is about $350 bucks average. I can sell it out right to some for about $400 bucks and make a small profit of $50 bucks. I can take that same phone and sell it with a contract upgrade (lowest profit margin, new lines pay more) for about $200 and make about $250 bucks in profit. AT&T pays me more to get that contract so I sell the phone below my cost. This is simple math. If i don't get that contract kickback then I am going to charge you more for the phone.

    2. Re:What a Wonderful World it Would Be by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Of course, it would be lovely if we could dispense with the entire status quo wherein mobile carriers subsidize the cost of phones to lock people in to long-term contracts. I'd gladly pay more for unlocked smartphones if it meant I could pay less for service (you'd better believe the cost of all those handsets is built into your bill) and switch at-will.

      There are several reasons why I don't see that happening:

      Carriers would lose a significant amount of customers - many people will not pay the full price up front - either they can't or simply won't - and as a result would not get a cell phone. I remember the days when that was the model - and very few people actually had a cell phone.

      Pay as you go customers are less valuable because they can price shop regularly - so revenue streams are unpredictable and carriers either get caught in price wars to keep customers, losing revenue, or the have high churn and need to advertise to get new customers, raising costs.

      Most people seem to like getting a new phone every few years - whether they need done or not. Contracts let them do that at a perceived lower cost; plus most companies let you renew at 18 months anyway so the two year lock is not really two years. This lowers churn making the model very desirable for companies.

      Realistically, as much as I want a new iPhone GS; for me the killer app is TomTom. As long as that works reasonably well on my existing 2G phone I really don't need an upgrade. If not, I can always get a cheap GPS and carry it with me and wait until my contract allows me the lowest subsidized price. By then the GS may well be old news as well.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    3. Re:What a Wonderful World it Would Be by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      That world does exist. It's called "Europe". Here in the UK, for example, phone carriers are obliged to unlock the phone (my carrier will do it from 30 days after the contract starts for the equivalent of about $25), and they're all in rabid competition for the "SIM-only" market that it's opened up. So you can get unlimited texts, ten hours of calls, and unlimited internet for about $30-$35 depending on carrier. If you don't want the unlimited internet access there's a carrier which does about the same for the equivalent of $15-$20. Those prices are including tax, by the way.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  126. Mod Parent Up by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

    +1 Insightful

    --
    You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  127. Insight on customer base.... by SchizoStatic · · Score: 1

    I see this as an insight on the customer base. I am a blackberry owner on verizon. I got the Curve just before the Storm was announced. I just thought mm that sucks well atleast this phone is stable and field tested. Sure enough the Storm came out with bugs galore. But you did not hear all of the blackberry user base crying fowl over this. So maybe this is an insight into the customer base of Apple. Whiney babies?

    --
    https://www.speakservers.com/
  128. Guess I planned well.... by UttBuggly · · Score: 1

    Went to get the 1st Gen iPhone 2 years ago and came home with a Samsung A727.instead.

    My "upgrade fee" is $18 for an iPhone 3GS now.

    I have no complaint!

    --
    I am my own gestalt.
  129. I hate to say I told you so... by DarkProphet · · Score: 1

    Eh. Though the iPhone seemed pretty damn cool when it came out, I said 'no' and stayed with my current phone and provider because, well, if it ain't broke, don't fix it. I didn't want to leave the provider I have been with for 8 years that has provided reliable (and relatively bullshit free) service throughout. I especially didn't want to switch to AT&T. It sucks, but I don't really feel bad about those who feel bent over. You took that risk in the first place and now have to pay the piper. I'd like to have an iPhone, but I will wait until Apple ends its exclusivity contract with AT&T and multiple providers support the iPhone. Until then, my phone will remain, just a phone. Until then, laissez faire!

    --
    What could possibly hurt the security of the American people more than giving our own government the ability to hide its
  130. Predictable... by rworne · · Score: 1

    Classic:

    AT&T just deleted the thread as I was reading it!

    --
    I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
  131. 32GB $63USD by cl0ckt0wer · · Score: 1

    I can get a 32 GB USB drive on newegg for $62.99. So no, it is not worth $500 for the added space alone. How can you people keep doing this to yourself? It's a good phone, but the added functionality isn't work the price. Hell, for $600, the full retail price, you can get a whole MAC Mini, or a Windows Laptop! And neither of those require me to sign a contract with at network as spotty and overpriced as AT&T.

  132. Easy Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The easy solution is to allow existing users to tack-on another 2 year plan. AT&T recovers their profits and people now have to choice to break their existing agreements (probably useful for people who are almost finished with their plans) or add on two years (useful for those who are at the beginning).

    Either way, ATT, Apple, and the consumers win when people get to make choices about their own contractual status.

    I don't know if this has already been posted elsewhere; there are already almost 300 comments. If so, I apologize.

  133. Hey, there IS an early upgrade discount by docbrody · · Score: 1
    If this guy is to be believed, according to Rick Fox, spokesperson for AT&T there is an 'early upgrade discount':

    If you are not currently eligible for an upgrade but still want iPhone 3G S, we can offer you an early upgrade price of $399 (16 GB) and $499 (32 GB).

  134. i can explain it by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    It's because it generates more ad revenue for web sites like Slashdot, Gizmodo, Engadget, et al. Stories like this about the latest Nokia wouldn't generate any traffic.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  135. Wrong cliche is wrong by mcrbids · · Score: 1

    Absolutely. Besides, early adopters always get the shaft. That's the price you pay for being an early adopter.

    This statement reflects a cliche that's just wrong.

    Back in the 1980's, the concept of the database was just starting to filter down into the small business world, to replace paper. I remember helping my pappy set up his fire-breathing 286/20 (with 20 MB of HDD, and a whole MEGABYTE of RAM!!!) in order to take advantage of a custom database package based on FoxPro.

    The computer had far less processing and storage power than my phone today. The screen was lower resolution, as well. Yet somehow, my pappy not only managed to justify the $10,000 price tag, he actually managed to come out ahead in about a year, in reduced man hours as well as "chased down" insurance payments that would have been missed otherwise.

    Sure, you could put together the same package today for $3,100. ($3,000 for the software, $100 for the computer on EBay) But it's just idiotic to think that my pappy's small medical practice didn't come out ahead. And these guys who complain about $200? That works out to somewhere around $0.50 per day, less than I spend on the 2-litre of diet soda I buy every day on the way home from work.

    Wwwwwaaaahhhh!

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    1. Re:Wrong cliche is wrong by mtapman · · Score: 1

      2 liters of soda per day? Dude, stop doing that to yourself. Buy a water tomorrrow, please.

      --
      Like trees blowing in the wind.
    2. Re:Wrong cliche is wrong by mcrbids · · Score: 1

      Did you actually just say "buy a water"? I offer a glimpse at what you get when you buy a bottle of "pure" water. And if you don't mind me asking: what is it that I'm doing to myself, other than enjoying a sweet, tasty beverage with no calories and no known side effects?

      Diet soda is actually more pure water than bottled water in many cases. Me? I'd rather go for the (highly regulated) tap if it's just water anyway.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    3. Re:Wrong cliche is wrong by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Well, there was that article the other day about cola sapping potassium from the body and leaving people weak and sickly.

      I'd be wary of drinking that much soda on a regular basis.

      (but yeah, tap water is fine, even better with a bit of ice)

    4. Re:Wrong cliche is wrong by mtapman · · Score: 1

      http://www.dentalgentlecare.com/diet_soda.htm and http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/diet-soda/AN01732 for example... 2 liters of any man made liquid is going to be more than you should ingest in a day. All things in moderation. While I'm all for people eating what they want it makes me cringe when I see people consuming chemicals like there's no tomorrow. At least switch to a natural juice if you want something sweet and don't like water that much.

      --
      Like trees blowing in the wind.
    5. Re:Wrong cliche is wrong by mtapman · · Score: 1

      He's just flaming with the tap water thing, remember he's driving home from work, so not likely to stop at the gas station for a glass of water...now if he were concerned about the environment he'd use a decent canteen bottle and fill it with tap water before leaving work. That would actually help his teeth because of the fluoride in the water, not to mention the chlorine. And he wouldn't be contributing to the soda industry and all of the chemicals required to produce that stuff, nor to the bottle industry and all of the oil that goes into that industry. But that's probably a bit more severe than anyone really needs to be, just some modest changes and we can all be a bit nicer to the planet.

      --
      Like trees blowing in the wind.
  136. RE: CEO Lawlessness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We are yet again presented with evidence that CEOs, CFOs, and COBs, residing in the United States of America, live under the presumption of impunity from their committing crimes at the local, state, and federal level.

  137. Income statement != iPhone profit margin by nobodyman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If you honestly think that you can take an income statement from the whole of AT&T and extrapolate the iPhone profit margins you are out of your mind. For all we know they are losing money hand-over-fist in one area and are compensating with obscene markups on iPhones.

    Instead, let's go with what we know. We know the unsubsidized price of the phone is $200 more than the new contract price. So we can safely assume that $8.33 a month of your bill is going towards paying off your "loan".

    I really wish that the market was just fundamentally changed. No other industry can get away with this shit. Would you be willing to "buy" a new Prius for $15,000 so long as you were forced to gas up and Toyota dealerships at $10.00/gallon for the life of the car? Hell no. Yet that's what were doing with phones. And people seem to love it.

    1. Re:Income statement != iPhone profit margin by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Bad question -- Prius purchasers are almost implicitly looking to save on and minimize gas usage.

      What if you could buy a Corvette for just $10,000 but had to gas it up at GM dealerships for twice the price per litre? I bet a number of people would go for that option. Those same people would want the new Corvette model next year when it comes out too.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    2. Re:Income statement != iPhone profit margin by Phoghat · · Score: 1

      Yes, but there would probably be a 3 year contract and exorbitant fee for early termination.

      --
      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
  138. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  139. contract extensions by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    In addition, if you have had a phone for +/- 12 months, you can get a discount on a new one if you agree to a contract extension of a year.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  140. Switched to Verizon by yyyimmortal · · Score: 1

    AT&T's policies have been going downhill in recent years. I was with AT&T since 1997 and decided to change over to Verizon last year when AT&T was jerking me around with subscription pricing. Very happy with Verizon now.

  141. Just a distraction from the actual evil of ATT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, maybe not evil. But I do seem to recall ATT getting booed several times at WWDC this morning.

    Maybe this non-story is just a distraction from the fact that tens of providers in other countries will be getting things like MMS messaging and tethering way before ATT provides them in the US?

  142. Time to upgrade by kimvette · · Score: 1

    I passed on the original iPhone because of the inevitable bugs and lack of 3G. I passed on the 3G iPhone because it stupidly STILL lacked copy&paste and also has horrible battery life. They've finally got it to the point I want. However, as one who qualifies for an upgrade from AT&T, can I go to the Apple store and get the upgrade, or do I HAVE to go directly to AT&T? I want the extended warranty (for phones and laptops and maybe high-end DSLR cameras the warranties are worth it - for everything else they're money thrown away) and do not want to deal with AT&T's idea of a "refurbished" phone in the event that I do need a replacement.

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    1. Re:Time to upgrade by kimvette · · Score: 1

      N/M I just checked Apple's site and their form has the upgrade options on there. Woohoo!

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  143. G1 (G2) beats iPhone anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you switched from T-Mobile to AT&T for the iPhone, you probably deserve to get "screwed." T-Mobile has the G1 and upcoming G2, which is a much better choice than the iPhone. It's easier to develop for, easier to make your app available and (imho) is a much better device to begin with. I'm a Mac user and loathe the times when using Windows is necessary, but that doesn't mean I'm part of the Apple CULTure. I don't need an iPhone, because it's not the best device available. And if I had an iPhone, I wouldn't be stressed out about getting the newest version anyway. What's the point?

  144. WHINE WHINE WHINE must be the I-THING by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wow, really, you all signed the contract you knew per the last update this is how it works (new activations, well your at least 18 and no one told you to ask questions and read before you sign, i feel for you lol) and what do you know a new one came out. HEAVEN FORBID A NEW PHONE LOL.

      This is how it has worked for years you sign a new contract you get phones cheaper, your not eligible for a new phone you pay lots of money, you people are complaining about not being able to upgrade to the latest and greatest right after you just did an update , think how the people who broke their phone feel (before upgrade time). Not saying the system is right but all this over an iphone nobody did this for the rumor, blackjack, and countless other phones which were updated over the years, really not an "I"Thing fan so i find this whole article really entertaining. I have a feeling the I-Community will win this one though sadly cause att cant stop massive waves of people who think they deserve something special cause they are the I-Community LOL, one big I D ten T error after another Darwin really needs to get on the ball.

    I just bought something and now something better came out i want that instead, cell phone companies are not rent-a-centers

  145. In other news. by Roskolnikov · · Score: 1

    Crack cocaine users are upset that their local dealers aren't cutting them the same break they got for their first rock.

    --
    Unix, an obscure operating system developed by bored researchers in an attempt to get a better game playing experience.
  146. Re:Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by SaDan · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yeah, replying to an AC, but I have a G1, so here goes:

    A.> Yeah, it can. Like run multiple applications at the same time that sustain network connections when you background each application. Try running several SSH connections at the same time off of the iPhone, and switching to the browser and back.

    Poorly coded base OS? You mean the one that came with cut and paste support the minute it hit the stores? The one that supports Flash? A micro-SD card slot? The one you don't have to use iTunes with to transfer content because it will show up as a USB drive on almost any modern computer?

    B.> That's your opinion. Personally, I'd rather have form over function if it means getting the job done. The G1 has an excellent keyboard, compared to what you get (or don't get) with an iPhone. Why give up screen real estate for a lesser on-screen keyboard?

    C.> Go pay your phone bill. Enjoy the cost of that data plan!

    D.> Let's hope it's free like all the other apps I have loaded on my G1.

    The iPhone works for a lot of people, including some of my friends. The G1 works better for me, and I have no problems with T-Mobile's network. As far as 3G goes, I have it disabled on my phone to save battery life. I have no issues using 2G speeds for my needs.

    If you want REAL speed from a cell network, then neither AT&T or T-Mobile can offer what Sprint or Verizon can with their EVDO networks. It's not even a comparison, provided you have the coverage.

  147. Re:BooHoo or switch by kurt555gs · · Score: 1

    You could just ditch the old iPhone and upgrade to a Nokia N97. The Nokia store called me today, and I will be there at 8:00AM tomorrow. The new N97 replaces my N95 8GB which has been wonderful.

    Oh, and these are un-locked phones.

    I have AT&T as my carrier, and my contract ran out long ago. Even if it did'nt buying a Nokia means upgrading is just switching SIM cards, then downloading a bunch of stuff.

    As far as things you can get for the Nokia, remember that Nokia holds a substantial lead in 'smartphone' units over the iPhone, Blackberry, or G1. Last time I checked all of those combined didn't reach the Nokia numbers.

    Go look http://www.nokiausa.com/

    --
    * Carthago Delenda Est *
  148. well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, somr people were stupid enough to buy the overhyped junk that is the iPhone...so they deserve what they get!

  149. Fist gen Iphone didnt use an upgrade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When the VERY first iPhone came out, it wasnt considered an upgrade, and didnt count against you on your AT&T contract. BUT you did have to sign a NEW 2 Yr. from that date contract. Bring that back, and you will have happy customers!! I HAD the first, I got the second and YES I will get the third one too!

  150. get over it, cry babies by the_wesman · · Score: 1

    I've been using AT&T now for 10+ years - people complain about them, I've never had an issue - maybe I could pay a little less, or have one or two minor things better, but they've always worked for me - I pay my bill on time and when I hit "send" the call connects - then, the iphone showed up and I wanted one and I got to have it - yay - I stood in line for one june 29, 2007 - they sold out of 8GB ones, so I bought the 4GB - I still have it - I wanted the 3G, but the app store & 2.0 firmware alone last summer were the big sellers, so I skipped that generation - it's now been 2 years and I'm eligible for an upgrade - this is the way it's always been with AT&T - stick around, and you'll get a deal, but you don't get discounts every time you ask for one - is that a huge loss? not really. if you have a 3G already, ask yourself how badly you want the 3GS features - if you want them badly enough, pay for them - if not, then wait - it's only 1 year out of your life in which you'll still have a super cool phone - you'll be fine

    --
    calling all destroyers
  151. Not that new of a concept by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is not a NEW phenomenon nor is it singular to ATT. Go look for any new phone and you will always see 2 or more prices for the phone. I sell ATT and Sprint phones at RadioShack. People constantly complain that ANY PHONE they want to upgrade too has a higher price to them then it would to a new customer. There are also different tier prices for people with and without unlimited messaging on their phones.
    The only reason they offered the discount for people upgrading to the 3G was because the people who had purchased the original iPhone on release paid full price for the phone so the subsidy was transferred to the new 3G they got with a new 2 year contract that is not up yet for most people after 18 months of service most people will be eligible for the full discounted price. For those that got their 3G last summer that would mean about Christmas. That is not as far away as it seems.

  152. I'd like a large STFU with a side of boo hoo. by Moofie · · Score: 1

    I bought a 3G iPhone six months ago, and magically next Wednesday it's going to become a lot more capable. Anybody who thought that the iPhone they bought was going to be The Gold Standard for the two years of their contract is a freakin' moron.

    No buyer's remorse here. My phone's great, I don't need a new one, and the one I'll get someday in the future will be even better. There is no problem here.

    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  153. Suck it up buttercup..... by AnAdventurer · · Score: 1
    I bought a first gen iphone pre-price reduction. And I just got a new iPhone last month. This would be capitalism at work. We have to pay-up or put-up.

    Just wait it out, you will be fine. This is no different then any other contract on any other phone, except, ofcourse this one is really cool.

    --
    6.8SPC TR of 550, l xwind at 6, drift rt at 26" drops 77". AT has 503 ft-lbs at 1403 fps. FT 0.86
  154. Loyal as long as it is exclusive... by Gerhardius · · Score: 1

    AT&T owes iPhone customers nothing: they have a monopoly and can price accordingly. Fanboys should know the release cycle of Apple products by now and get their contracts accordingly.

  155. You get what you pay for by wintermute000 · · Score: 1

    I fail to see how making someone adhere to the terms of a voluntary contract can be outrageous.

    By offering you an upgrade its already a bonus.

    When you signed a contract did you at any point consider the possibility of an upgrade within 24 months, and did you ask AT&T if there was an upgrade path? And they they promise you one at XYZ price? If no then as the internets says, STFU.

    Part of your monthly fee is going towards the subsidy that enabled you to get your shiny iphone 3G for cheaper than straight retail unlocked. You signed a fixed contract to do so. How hard is that to understand?

    And let me pose another question: all you people whining about this, is this the first mobile phone contract you have entered into and / or is this the first time you have discussed the in/outs of entering a carrier contract? Never listened to a coworked or friend moan about how they're being gouged? Or read comments (like on slashdot)? OMG the sense of entitlement is killing me.

    1. Re:You get what you pay for by freedom_india · · Score: 1

      By offering you an upgrade its already a bonus

      By continuing to stay with AT&T, we are offering it a bonus. To quote Gandhi, a Customer is not dependent on us. We are Dependent on him.

      and did you ask AT&T if there was an upgrade path?

      Response from AT&T: AT&T does not comment on its contracts. AT&T bluntly said they had no comments on my question.

      You signed a fixed contract to do so. How hard is that to understand?

      Have you read all the 244 pages of an AT&T contract and applicable law?

      all you people whining about

      This is slashdot. This is not Law Central or the local coffee house. We have the right to complain. Anything we say can and should be taken seriously by telephone companies. We have the right to a lawyer.

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
    2. Re:You get what you pay for by wintermute000 · · Score: 1

      Contrary to your name and your signature, you're not much of a libertarian are you?

      And I love your straw man argument. Nobody reads the 244 pages but you read and understand the main bit, that charges are X for Y duration and to break the contract requires Z. And if you didn't get that basic bit frankly you deserve to be gouged.

      And if you didn't read the contract then how are you EXPECTING to be rewarded with an upgrade option???

      Either you're a bit thick or you're a troll (or both)

    3. Re:You get what you pay for by freedom_india · · Score: 1

      Oh, you want to talk about contract?? Come on:
      How about AT&T charging me for minutes if my phone keeps ringing for more than 30 seconds?
      How about throttling my mobile network if i use it as a modem?
      How about canceling my service if i criticize AT&T?
      How about overcharging me with FUS while blocking calls to soldiers in Iraq who call from PBX? (its illegal).
      Contracts are NOT sacrosanct. Contracts are NOT law.
      Contract law is based on mutual, equal remuneration. Contracts can be voided by courts (and have been done many times so) if it can be proved AFTER signing the contract that one party has undue advantage over another.
      Your rant about contracts clearly shows that you are one of the few hold outs who still think in 1800's style of contracts overriding law and your hiding behind skirt of contracts show you have nothing worthwhile to argue about.
      Get through your thick aluminium skull: Contracts are NOT law, inspite of what corporates want you to believe. They can be voided by courts, have been done and will continue to be done.

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
    4. Re:You get what you pay for by wintermute000 · · Score: 1

      woohoo, sometimes you feed the troll and he bites back.

      None of what you are arguing invalidates the original argument: that there is nothing wrong in AT&T not giving existing iphone contract holders the same cheap upgrade path as new customers.

      So AT&T have crappy service and charge you stupid rates for stupid things. Good for them. Why are you with them again???

      And oh I forgot to give you bonus points for invoking Gandhi in a discussion about consumer telco contracts: brilliant stuff.

      As for your legal nous, if I ever needed a lawyer then I sure hope you're not that guy. Why don't you go and check out the current status of contract law. This isn't design your own utopian future, this is about dealing with the situation as it stands, and right now, AT&T's contract with you is legally enforceable barring any of the legally recognised exceptions / breaches that may rule it invalid.

      Maybe some of the points you raised are, maybe they aren't, IANAL but I know enough about contract law to know that it has NOTHING to do with mutual, equal renumeration. Its actually defined (in the British/Australian model anyway) as a voluntary binding agreement with consideration. Let me help you to a nice wikipedia quote: In common law systems, the five key requirements for the creation of a contract are: 1. offer and acceptance (agreement) 2. consideration 3. an intention to create legal relations 4. legal capacity 5. formalities. I did some contract law in uni and the point was rammed home

      The point is not whether the current legal system is fair or whatever, its HOW THE SYSTEM WORKS AT PRESENT AND HOW WE AS INDIVIDUALS CAN DEAL WITH IT BEST. Yelling at the judge that you find the current laws on par with Victorian English levels of oppression will get you nowhere.

      You're an idiot and with that level of outrage over something as minor (and avoidable lol) as signing up to what is known to be a crappy, gouging carrier in a free friggin market, makes you a class A self righteous geek martinet.

      And for the record, I'm not a libertarian nor do I believe that the current common law interpretation of contract is the 'right' one, but I DO KNOW WHAT THE CURRENT INTERPRETATION IS AND HOW IT AFFECTS ME. What I would do in my own utopian fantasy world is irrelevant

    5. Re:You get what you pay for by freedom_india · · Score: 1

      I was with AT&T. Sued them in small claims court to get out of the contract because their calls get dropping in my location.
      Their contract allowed me to get out, but they didn't. Instead they sent me a breakage charge, legal notice and fines to back them up.
      Once i sued them in SC court, they did not show up. Got a judgement against their practice. They still kept sending me notices, and even threatened to report me to credit scorers.
      I sent them the judgement copy, credit scorers and also wrote them a serious warning that if they try to trash my score or tried to collect (the new illegal charges) they would be in violation of court orders.
      No response.
      No acknowldgement of any kind accepting their guilt or even saying sorry. Just silence.
      The fact is that you TOO can get out of a contract if you want to. Lawfully. You just need to try. And no, you don't need a lawyer.

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
    6. Re:You get what you pay for by wintermute000 · · Score: 1

      I've never had to actually go to court but I've gone through the motions before, called the ombudsman and looked up the provisions in our Trade Practices Act, etc., got a case lodged in the fair trading office etc. and then the retailer in question backed down when I waved it in their faces. But that wasn't for a telco contract.

      Anyway I can understand your hatred for AT&T. If I lived in the US I would probably hate them too - but you can't blame them for not offering the iphone 3GS upgrade to existing contract users, or charging them a bit more. This clearly does not fall in the realm of the scenarios you were describing i.e. it does not constitute a breach nor does it fulfil any of the legal conditions that invalidates a contract (lack of real consent / coercion, etc.)

    7. Re:You get what you pay for by freedom_india · · Score: 1

      This clearly does not fall in the realm of the scenarios you were describing i.e. it does not constitute a breach nor does it fulfil any of the legal conditions that invalidates a contract

      True. Very True.
      Anger != Fact.
      Point taken-:)

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
    8. Re:You get what you pay for by cerberusss · · Score: 1

      Well done! Frankly, I'm regularly amazed by people that let themselves screwed over by $BIGCORP. And you stood up for yourself. Again, well done.

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
  156. Tolerance for corporate hegemony by IanDanforth · · Score: 1

    I find the tolerance for corporate greed and power in this thread really appaling, especially from the hacker crowd.

    I've read a number of arguments that boil down to this: You should have read the contract. I don't care if you don't like it.

    Well first off wireless carriers in this country do not offer contracts, they offer ultimatums. A proper contract is negotiated between parties who all have a say in the matter. Not only that but breaking a contract has consequences for both parties. This simply isn't what the monopoly in this case offers. You sign the paper they wrote without input or you get nothing. They get guaranteed revenue far in excess of their expenditure on the subsidy for a period of two years with no guarantee of service, reliability, or quality. You fail to pay and they terminate your account, they fail to provide coverage and you're stuck calling tech support.

    To cut this to the bone, this is about power. They can dictate any terms they want unless the consumers act in a group to protest their policies. Remember this is a company that benefited multiple times from direct subsidies from the federal government, relies on access to public infrastructure to provide its service, cooperated in violating constitutionally protected private communications, and continues to make significant profit off of outrageously priced data fees despite the rest of the economy tanking.

    If you're willing to sit back and get screwed by companies like this, then they will continue to screw not only you, but the rest of us. I'm not calling for boycott or anything stupidly overplayed like that, but for goodness sake, recognise when the system is not the peoples favor and have the compassion to voice your support for the rest of us getting screwed even if you personally enjoy the feeling.

    1. Re:Tolerance for corporate hegemony by Legion303 · · Score: 1

      "I find the tolerance for corporate greed and power in this thread really appaling, especially from the hacker crowd."

      It's only because people who willingly signed a contract with AT&T deserve the assfucking they knew they were going to get. I have no sympathy. It's like spending all your disposable income on CDs and then whining about the RIAA after you've helped fund their lawsuits.

  157. But I want it for free... by Xaoswolf · · Score: 1

    I really hate people some times. You got one phone for free, so you feel that you need another? Get a damn job and buy one.

  158. Where you at? by iluvcapra · · Score: 1

    Considering Boost is owned by Sprint, I'm not sure where this would get us.

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Baltar.
  159. Few things are less frivolous by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    But, I think in these economic times, spending money where one needs/has to is better than the, IMHO, frivolousness of the iPhone.

    I totally disagree. If it came down to it the iPhone is the last recurring monthly bill I would still be paying. Far from frivolous, it's the most practical thing I own.

    It can play video and thus replace a TV with cable.

    Of course it's a phone and can replace landlines.

    It's a live internet connection all the time wherever you go.

    It's an invaluable mapping tool for when you are wandering or lost.

    The cost is utterly reasonable compared to so many other things people pay for (like Cable), given all that you can do... We are well and truly spoiled that anything under $100 a month sounds like much for the range of abilities you can get.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  160. They Paid Me $50 To Take My Phone by krick-zero · · Score: 1

    I have a Nokia 6236i phone from Verizon when I signed my 1 year contract about 3 years ago. After all fees and rebates, I ended up +$50 in the deal. Guess what? It does everything a phone should do. I can make outgoing calls and receive incoming calls. Mission accomplished. If you're the kind of dipshit who buys an iPhone for multiple hundreds of dollars just so you can show it off at Starbucks during the day and rub your penis on the touch screen at night, then you should just shut your mouth, bend over, and happily take whatever Apple and AT&T want to give you.

    1. Re:They Paid Me $50 To Take My Phone by Legion303 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I rub my penis on the touchscreen during the day, at Starbucks.

  161. Doesn't Apple control its products prices? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A friend of mine wanted to get one of the iPhones like a year ago from Rogers (the only cellphone carrier of iPhones in Canada). According to them at the time the set prices for the iPhones were dictated by Apple regardless of plan or standing and not by them, as are all other Mac products. Thats why a store has to be a 'certified Apple reseller' to stock Apple products, to make sure that the prices stay more or less the same and not various different prices (which if priced too low could hurt their value perception). Not to mention that it is an Apple product, but it was also:
    a) Mentioned by Apple that this is how the prices will be, regardless and not AT&T
    b) It was mentioned at the Apple WWDC by Apple themselves.
    By the way all of this looks, it seems more like AT&T is being scapegoated into looking like the 'evil price hiker' and not Apple which seems more like the real ones behind the pricing of the new iPhone.

  162. Here comes the bad car analogy... by stephanruby · · Score: 1

    If you buy a Mini-Cooper on credit, don't come crying to me when Mini-Cooper comes out with a cuter car the following year. That's what your AT&T two-year inflated contract is for -- it's a form of debt. If you can't accept the consequences of taking on debt, don't sign up for it. Believe me, if you're willing to pay the money upfront, you can get some excellent unlocked smart-phones that will work on T-Mobile without having to pay a surcharge for service. Do that next time. Hell, if you don't mind paying for a termination fee, rumor has it that your iPhone will work on T-Mobile just as well (just don't count on getting the Apple firmware updates that way).

  163. Here's a thought. by wickerprints · · Score: 1

    Let's see... 2 year service contract / 1 year hardware design cycle = 2 hardware revisions per contract period ... fewer users upgrading, lower hardware revenues. Maybe, just maybe, I can wait another year until the next incremental change happens. Sorry, as much as I enjoy using Apple products, this is really poor business strategy. You're losing a whole subset of potential customers willing to drop hundreds more on a new handset every year, who are now instead going to wait every two years to get the lowest price. It doesn't take a genius to look at how Apple has milked the iPod cash cow by tweaking the product every six months or so. Tiny incremental changes, advertised as revolutionary, just to get the masses to throw away their "obsolete" device for something new. It's like disposable technology, only the per unit cost is significantly higher.

    This was never really about the money. $200 every year is less than $20 a month. People pay more than three times that amount just for the phone service, and we all know AT&T is gouging us. It was never really about contracts. It is about being played. I don't believe in Apple's way of manipulating its product lifecycle to get users to buy every incremental change. They could've made the iPhone 3G S last year. The technology existed. But they held back and they're dragging it out. It reeks of consumer exploitation. And if we weren't bound to a single carrier, you can be sure that the competitive pressure would be a good thing for the consumer. Frankly, for a group of people who enjoy a product so much they're willing to pay several hundred, if not a thousand, dollars a year, an extra few hundred is not a dealbreaker. But feeling like you're being taken for a fool...well, that's the sort of thing that drives people to develop a love/hate relationship with a company like Apple.

    I've never wanted the Palm Pre to succeed as bad as I do now. I want all the competitors to succeed. Nokia, RIM, Samsung, LG, even Microsoft. I want them to make a kick-ass device that will give Apple a run for its money. I'm not holding my breath, but I can hope. Come on Android, make something great already. It's only when the competition actually poses a threat to market dominance that real innovation starts to happen, and prices go down.

    The thing is, the iPhone 3G isn't somehow magically rendered obsolete just because Apple made an improved version. It still does what it does. And with the new OS, it'll do even more. Such is the way technology changes. Yes, I think I'm sticking with my current phone. I waited one year to get 3G, I waited another year to get video/MMS/etc. I told myself I'd buy the new iPhone no matter what. And after the wait, and seeing the writing on the wall, I've come to the realization that I don't really care about having Apple's latest toy anymore. In fact, I really don't do much with my existing iPhone anyway. So why continue buying into this scheme? To paraphrase Mark Twain, if you're being regarded as an idiot, why play along and remove all doubt?

  164. One thing that's odd... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree with most people here... the current compromise of $200 off msrp is at least a half decent deal for extending the current contract 2 yrs from today.... (just a touch out of my current budget)

    What I find odd, and what I don't understand, is why I can't extend my contract 2 yrs from the end of my current contract and get the full subsidy... seems to me that basic 4th grade arithmetic would allow this. So far, no luck in my talks with my local ATT shop. Perhaps this will change by the 19th?

    As to why I'd do this? Easy, ATT is the only provider here that has a full signal at both my home and office. There's no reason I'd leave town, or sell my business, so adding another 2 yrs is fine by me... For some reason no one at the local ATT shop seems to have passed 4th grade math....

    I do also find it odd that Apple and ATT aren't pricing/subsidizing the phone more aggressively... pretty much everyone that would want an iPhone at $199+ has one already... few of them, if any, will qualify for the full subsidy... and I doubt many will see the value in the $200/off msrp price.... (based on early observations not many seem to) Seems to be a slight mis-calculation there... Not wrong or evil, just... perhaps... not that smart?

  165. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is ridiculous and slap in the face to long-time loyal iPhone customers like me who switched from T-Mobile and the only reason was the iPhone

    Hahahaha I laughed so hard it hurt. What the F U C K did you expect? You thought Apple was your friend? You thought they are supposed to be loyal to you!? People who buy Apples shit are so fucking stupid that they deserve it.

  166. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by Trahloc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is perfectly normal, they give a $200 discount so people sign a 2 year agreement. A few give reduced discounts before the contract is up but a majority only give discount prices when your out of contract. Anyone who doesn't understand this and feels its a 'slap in the face' should grow up, it's not like they hide this fact at signup.

    --
    The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
  167. What's the big deal? by Pitr · · Score: 1

    The new firmware/OS/whatever is neat, and available to all iPhones. The new hardware is barely incremental. Yeah there's a higher capacity model(hey, how about a memory slot? Anyone?), slightly better battery life (How about a user replaceable battery so you can carry a spare? You know, like every other cell phone ever invented?), and the compass is kinda neat (do the boy scouts have an iPhone survival badge?) but it's just not that big a deal. Even the fact that it's got a faster CPU doesn't matter that much. It's not like there's any apps that will only run on the newer phone (they've basically stated as much).

    If they fixed the hardware limitations (which they're unlikely to do as that would eat into their ridiculous profits on memory, and it's just too dangerous to change your battery while driving a Volkswagen drinking a latte... ok, I'm a little biased, but that doesn't make me wrong! Why can't I change the battery myself?!? Like... without a soldering iron!) then I'd see upgrading to the iPhone 3.1, but not the iPhone 3.0001.

    I guess asking for simple, basic features is out of the question, after all, we're talking about a company that took 20 years to give in and add a second button to their mice.

    (This post is kinda all over the place. Sorry, it's really late, hopefully there's some sense in there somewhere...)

    --

    --Not to be worried, Pitr fix.
  168. You agreed to a loan with payments by johncandale · · Score: 1

    When you buy a discounted phone and sign a 2 year contract, say it again, /contract/, you are getting a Loan. You get the Phone for cheaper but a piece of your monthly bill is actually payment towards your debt. What's so odd about them wanting you to complete your loan payments before they give you a new loan?

  169. Apple fan boys get their panties in a twist by rossz · · Score: 1

    I have an HTC Kaiser (aka Tilt). I've had it for just over a year. There's a better HTC phone at that I would love to have, but I would have to pay more than I wish to if I want to upgrade, or I can wait a little longer and upgrade very cheap or for free. This is how the cell phone business works. So just STFU and stop whining.

    --
    -- Will program for bandwidth
  170. Would you like some cheese with that whine? by davmoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What the hell, I've got Karma to burn...

    Apple/AT&T release a new phone and only new customers and customers with contracts about to end get it for upgrade pricing. Others are crying.

    Guess what, cry babies...that's just like every other carrier in the US does. Its the industry standard here. Why did you expect different from AT&T and His Holiness Lord Steve? Contrary to what you think, you are not better than everyone else. Welcome to the real world.

    --
    I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
  171. I have an original iPhone on contract by Peregr1n · · Score: 1

    This is exactly why I stuck with my original iPhone for an extra six months, rather than taking the free upgrade to the 3G. It was obvious that Apple were bringing out the next version, and I would rather save money and have a phone I'm happy with than pay through the nose for the latest shiniest very-slightly-better version. Now (hopefully) I can have a free (or greatly reduced price) upgrade to the 3GS.

  172. To parody Steve Martin in "The Jerk" by pbrooks100 · · Score: 1

    "The new iPhones are here! The new iPhones are here!"

    I bought a Ford Mustang years ago, and then Ford had the nerve to introduce a redesigned model, with fuel injection and a CD player. I used Ford Credit, but they wouldn't exchange my old car for the new model, and my year old car was only worth HALF of what I payed for it.

    1. Re:To parody Steve Martin in "The Jerk" by CountBrass · · Score: 1

      I can understand why you were upset.

      You bought a Ford Mustang! What were you thinking!

      --
      Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
  173. There are better options by Longhair · · Score: 1

    Just go with a real smart phone like Nokia N97 or Palm Pre. They beat the crap out of iPhone in features and versatility and give you much better value for money, and you don't have make life long deal with the operator, at least not with Nokia devices.

  174. Re:32GB $63USD by hattig · · Score: 1

    From the post you replied to: "One cause is likely that many of these iPhone customers were never smartphone customers before. These people had no idea just how much money smartphones cost MSRP."

    A smartphone isn't a flash chip and USB controller, so why compare to that? Indeed the 16GB of extra space on the iPhone 3GS is only $100, you can see that in the pricing - 16GB $199, 32GB $299.

  175. in the face of price gouging by nimbius · · Score: 1

    its imperative to see that the Iphone is fundamentally just a communications device. the network may be powerful but at its luxury pricepoint will you find it useful? what do you seriously use it for and how is it still benefiting you when youre faced with the inevitability that large corporations burdoned by recessions are leaning on loyal customers for that extra push toward the 4th quarters earnings?

    whats to stop them from charging 800 or 1000 for next years model?

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  176. Wait a second... by geminidomino · · Score: 1

    Let me make sure I understand this correctly...

    These shiny-chasers overpay for a phone because it comes out of the RDF. A year later a new one comes out, and they're pissed because they have to buy a new one without subsidy contract?

    The same as everyone else has ALWAYS had to do it with these scumbags? What is it they think makes them special?

    See, THIS kind of thing is why people pick on Apple fans. Mindboggling.

    1. Re:Wait a second... by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      "I deserve everything and someone else should pay for it because I'm special."

  177. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by Sj0 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I was thinking the same sort of thing.

    I stopped using contract cellular for various reasons, but I understood when I bought my first cellular (a contract phone) that I was paying for the phone by locking into the contract for so many months. How is AT&T supposed to make money giving away subsidized phones before they pay back the ones they've already subsidized?

    --
    It's been a long time.
  178. Family Plan by stewbacca · · Score: 1

    You can buy a new iPhone for $100 (and bypass the upgrade fee/turn in your old phone), even if you are already a customer. It will cost you about $15 a month more to be on the "Family" plan, until your current contract ends. At that time, cancel your old iPhone contract, and go back to a single iPhone bill. That's what I did with the first round, but ended up keeping the original phone and giving it to my wife. $120 a month for 2 family plan iPhones is much better than $180 a month for 2 individual plans (if you need two phones in your household).

  179. same high price for double the bandwidth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The glass definitely just got half emptied for those of us who just bought 3G phones. So, it seems to me the current owners of iPhone 3G are going to be stuck paying the same high price for data as the 3GS customers, but the 3GS-ers are getting double the bandwidth for their money, correct? How fucked up are all of you who call this fair? This is why we can't get a good national health care plan in this country, because of morons like you.

    1. Re:same high price for double the bandwidth by hazydave · · Score: 1

      The new iPhone will eventually support AT&T's 7Mb/s network, but they haven't even switched it on yet, much less deployed it nation-wide. Chance are, if this upgrade is typical, many buyers will be onto the next iPhone after this before they get full speed coverage in their local areas.

      Then there's the iPhone itself... while the current G3 model can connect at 3.5Mb/s or so... does anyone really think they're getting that kind of performance? My Treo, on Verizon's plain old EvDO 1.2a (or whatever) network, routinely outproduced the numerous iPhones that surround me, pretty much all the time (before its untimely death). If anything, their faster CPU will account for more real performance than any network improvements.

      --
      -Dave Haynie
  180. Rate plans changing too... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Beyond the cost issues for the phone itself, I now find that my rate plan must be "changed" to another plan that offers the same data / sms, but now is $15 more per month.

    thanks ATT.

  181. Carbonation is bad....mmmmkay? by stewbacca · · Score: 1

    I cut diet soda out of my life in 2005 and lost 30 pounds. I was 210lbs at 5'8" which was the straight up short/fat geek look. Guess what? I changed nothing else in my life or diet, other than swapping out diet soda with water. Carbonation is bad, mmmkay?

  182. This is not the iphone you're looking for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a modest upgrade, at best. The new features are nothing that apps don't already cover and the design difference is... what? Is there one? It's a ploy to get those last holdouts to come to the white side. The real upgrade will be the next one. Which will be out just in time for your contract. It ALWAYS works this way with apple. Never buy the first model, let them work out the bugs and develop the design (ask anyone who bought a 1st gen ipod), skip the minor upgrade and wait for the big leap in technology. Buy new toy. Be happy.

  183. Buying Apple products is BDSM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple is a sadist and its customers are masochists. You sign up, you love the product, you'll do anything for another one. Then they tease you, and just when you've given up on it ever coming out, it does. You love your new shiny thing, but it has problems. So you call Apple and hassle them. Now the Slave has the full attention of the Master -- what a glorious moment! But it, too, must end, and the whip comes crashing down with full force. But you beg for more.

  184. a ha ha ha ha ha ha - talk about apple fanbois. by Dr.+LeRoy · · Score: 1

    All the frickus frackus about a phone with some software upgrades and faster processor. Imagine if this broke out every time Apple bumped their laptop line....

    For me, I have an 8 month old G3 and will gladly enjoy the 3.0 OS upgrade FOR FREE. The next iPhone hardware revision is going to make the 3GS look like what it really is....a dot oh update.

    Dr. LeRoy

  185. Re:BooHoo or switch by Professor_UNIX · · Score: 1

    You know, for all these Nokia fanboys, the only people I've ever met that actually own a Nokia are ones that have the cheap piece of crap Nokia phone they got for free with their contract. *None* of them have ever had any kind of Nokia "smartphone". They're always some candybar phone or a cheap flip phone the store was giving away. For a supposed popular company, they sure are shit for marketing smartphones to the USA because over here the only smartphones I've ever seen are Blackberries, iPhones, or Windows Mobile-based devices.

  186. Re:Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BINGO - You hot the nail on the head.

    As a capitalist and free market lover I would normally follow suite and blame anyone who got into the contract.
    Unfortunately we in the States dont have the FREEDOMS you guys do in Europe when it comes to Telecom chioce, price or portability.

    Its all over priced here - I pay NOW more for a text message and calling abroad than I did 10 years ago - explain that one to me.
    F@CK AT&T.

  187. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by harryandthehenderson · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How is AT&T supposed to make money giving away subsidized phones before they pay back the ones they've already subsidized?

    The overpriced data plan that they force you to sign up for?

  188. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by Sj0 · · Score: 1

    You've already signed up for that. It's overpriced in part because they're paying a chunk of the price of the phone.

    So why should they throw away another couple hundred dollars on a customer they already have?

    --
    It's been a long time.
  189. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by harryandthehenderson · · Score: 1

    You've already signed up for that. It's overpriced in part because they're paying a chunk of the price of the phone.

    Yeah which answers your question of how they are going to get their money back.

    So why should they throw away another couple hundred dollars on a customer they already have?

    Because they are going to make that a couple times over on the ridiculous monthly bills from your phone and data plan?

  190. Destroying your own point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Although I usually have sympathy for "loyal customers" being overlooked in pricing policy (for well-known economic reasons), I had to laugh at this one:

    "... slap in the face to long-time loyal iPhone customers like me who switched from T-Mobile and the only reason was the iPhone...".

    1) If you only switched for the iPhone, then you must have switched in the last 2 years, as the iPhone has only been available since June, 2007 in the US. Hardly a "long-time" customer. Given that most cellphone contracts are 2 years long, you are at best an "average" customer.

    2) If you dumped your previous carrier because they did not offer the iPhone, then you are hardly a "loyal" customer. You seem willing to switch carriers to get the coolest gadgets. This is not loyalty!

  191. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by Trahloc · · Score: 2, Informative

    Simple answer, go with a different carrier. MetroPCS for instance is cheap with unlimited calls, no contracts, and inexpensive phones (compared to the major carriers undiscounted price). Oh yeah you can't use the phone coast to coast with a whole bunch of dead spots. You also don't have the option of purchasing phones directly from them with any decent features, they're all rather basic unless you transfer a sprint/verizon phone. Thats the sacrifice for going with a carrier that doesn't screw you. They aren't as good, but I prefer paying them and dealing with their short comings than paying cingular/at&t/verizon/sprint greater prices with annoying contracts.

    --
    The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
  192. Seriously, there is something you can do... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously people, if you are so upset about this go donate something to people trying to do something about how bad AT&T and the rest of the US service providers are!

  193. I don't get it by KiwiCanuck · · Score: 1

    Phone companies are not going to give you a free or discounted phone if they have not recouped the cost of your "old" phone. duH!

  194. Reseller by P.+Legba · · Score: 1

    We switched to a Cingular reseller, a 3-county cooperative, here in our town, keeping our Cingular numbers at the time. When it came time to switch back to AT&T to get the iPhone, it was going to take something like 5-6 weeks of paying for two numbers to keep the old Cingular number. Instant to transfer in from Verizon, but two months to keep the number the company itself had originally assigned.

  195. Normal? by gubers33 · · Score: 1

    Apple needs to chill out and stop crying because they are being treated like every other cell phone manufacturer. You can always upgrade every 2 years and you get a phone discounted when you sign the new contract. It is like that with AT&T, Verizon, and T Mobile. I mean customers aren't being treated any differently than they have been so put up with not having the newest shiny phone for a year or put out the extra cash. I mean if you wait until next year you will have the new shiny iPhone to show off to the guy who gets this one.

    --
    Just because you are wrong and I called you out on it doesn't mean I am a Troll.
  196. All of this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...has happened before, and all of this will happen again.

  197. I'm Not Angry by Wingsy · · Score: 1

    There is an easy solution for getting the new iPhone at regular price even if you're in a contract.

    Run an ad in Craigslist or somewhere. Advertise that you're GIVING AWAY your iPhone to anyone who will simply take over your ATT contract. Won't cost them anything; they just assume your billing. Your phone will be ringing off the hook for days once the ad runs. Then take this person with you to an ATT store, transfer the account at the same time you buy your new phone. Transfer your old number to your new phone.

    I did this with an LG phone on an ALLTEL contract when I got my iPhone last year, and this year it will be just as easy.

    Anyway, I don't understand why people think they are getting screwed by ATT wanting to get back the unpaid $200 left on your contract, money that is/was used to subsidize your phone.

    --
    If I didn't have absolutely NOTHING to do, I wouldn't be here.
  198. Seriously? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AT&T won't be on board with MMS till fall, will likely charge arms and legs for tethering, and won't be on board with the 7.2 network (faster 3G speeds) until 2011?

    AT&T is the weak link in this chain. I'm betting AT&T gets dropped like...an AT&T call...as soon as Apple sees a better deal. And the new company will likely offer included text messaging, lower-priced unlimited minutes / data plans, better service, and cheaper upgrades.

  199. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by Sj0 · · Score: 1

    No, it doesn't answer the question. Do they just add another 2 years to your contract then? I hope you really like that data plan and such, because you've got it for 4 years.

    --
    It's been a long time.
  200. Why would iPhone users receive preferential... by GooberToo · · Score: 1

    ...treatment?

    How is this any different than any other phone which comes out for a carrier?

    This sounds like iPhone users being users demanding free stuff for absolutely no reason. They sound like self entitled users.

    The entire reason the carrier offers these deals is to bring new users to their network. Period. Once they have you on a contract they have zero incentive to offer a discount. Why even require a two year contract if they allow these users to upgrade at a discounted rate? Wouldn't they then be obligated to allow all of their users to upgrade their phones at any time for no cost? How does this make any sense?

    Grow up people. You signed a contract. Why should you get an upgrade without paying for it? Why should you be excused from your contract?

  201. Why not just... by Twyst3d · · Score: 1

    An iPhone could be a mobile pc, do my laundry, my dishes, drive me to work, and pack my lunches and I wouldnt buy it because it ment signing on with AT&T. To me Service is everything. To them. Service is something that ends once the contract is signed.

    --
    And this has been another installament of Captain Obvious! /whoosh
  202. jailbreak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just wait for the jailbreak, and switch to another carrier. If enough people do it, AT&T might have to actually deal with competition. Then see how hard-hole they are with their upgrade policies.

  203. Why is this even a discussion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean, so what if you have to pay the extra for the phone. You know how you make that back? sell your old one on craigslist, and quit complaining.

  204. AT&T is showing anti-iPhone bias by Fierythrasher · · Score: 1
    Now I can agree with what everyone here is saying "It's a minor upgrade, wait" and "you signed the contract, suck it up" BUT for one thing. I got the iPhone 3G the night of release. I checked today and I am eligible for a subsidized renewal for every phone EXCEPT the iPhone 3GS. AT&T's policy is after *11 months* you can renew and get a cheaper phone.

    EXCEPT for the 3GS.

    Now the reason for this is likely that AT&T is getting bent over by Apple and forced to offer a bigger subsidy for the 3GS and they don't WANT to let us upgrade, but if I wanted a Razr or whatever the hell other phone they sell AT&T would give me the FULL, NEW CONTRACT price because it's been 11 months since my last one.

    But not the 3GS. THAT is where I cry bullshit.

  205. They deserve it !! by duwde · · Score: 1

    The only thing I can say is, THEY DESERVE IT !! Apple products are made for fools, so why are you all complaning ? * They sell it locked for abusive prices, unlocks are gettings harder every day (and there is no real unlock for 3g, like it was possible in 2g, only the yellowsnow thing in some 3g, but it is NOT a real baseband unlock. * They wanna charge for downloaded applications * They don't understand we want it UNLOCKED and not at abusive prices. That's why I keep using my Nokia. I pay to make my life EASIER, not harder... People signing contracts are fools to think apple is really caring about anything other their revenue...

  206. re: iPhone feature list (was "Why upgrade?") by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    I love Apple products, all in all, and I own quite a bit of their stuff. Still, when I read the list you posted, I'm not really all that convinced I "need" to get rid of my 3G iPhone and move up to the latest offering.

    First off, sure, the camera is improved. But we're still talking about only a 3 megapixel fixed focus camera here, that doesn't even include a flash. If I need a good photo of something, I'm going to go with something like my pocket-sized Sony camera instead. It has 7.1 megapixels of resolution, a flash, 3x optical zoom and won't use up my limited storage capacity in my iPhone either. (Remember, the iPhone STILL has no SD card slot on it for extra storage!)

    Second, the faster 3G support? Nice, in theory, but AT&T seems like they can barely keep up with the promised xfer speeds of the SLOWER 3G tier! They've been doing everything in their power to limit what you actually DO over that network on your iPhone, too. They won't let the Slingbox use it. It'll be MONTHS longer before they so much as let you send MMS video or photos over it. And again, it'll be months before they even start offering tethering on their network. So what's the rush to upgrade?

    I'd argue that the rest of your points are relatively minor enhancements. (Really? I need to get rid of my now "craptastic" iPhone because it doesn't have the oil/water resistant finish?!)

    The compass MAY turn into a pretty cool feature, but I'd say, only when apps start doing creative things with it. The fact it can currently show me my direction isn't that exciting in and of itself.

  207. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by numbski · · Score: 1

    Please don't mistake me when I say this:

    WHY DO YOU GUYS CARE?

    Seriously. I bought a 2G iPhone when they first came out. Unlocked it, put it on T-Mobile. The 3G came out, and yes - wireless data service is undoubtedly faster, and you have real GPS. Otherwise our phones are identical.

    So now the 3GS is out. Voice recognition seems to be the killer app here - but otherwise, you already HAVE a 3GS. Higher res camera and voice recognition are missing, true - but I have to think the voice recognition is in the software.

    I haven't missed out on not having a 3G iPhone so far, and I sincerely doubt you guys are going to really miss out on much by not being early adopters of the 3GS. It won't be jailbroken right away, it's not unlockable (unless you import it, in which case this thread means nothing to you), and to be blunt, when it comes out, you have the superior product in your hand already.

    I just don't get it. Someone want to clue me in? The metal casing on my 2G is starting to get beaten up enough for me to consider getting a new phone for that and more disk space, but by "new" I mean a used 3G once people start buying the 3GS, since the 3G is unlocked - but since T-Mobile's 3G data service isn't compatible, it's mostly getting an upgrade due to wear and tear, not for a new toy.

    Seriously, fill me in on why you guys really care.

    --

    Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

  208. The other baffling thing about this by sean.peters · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The general consensus is that people are being crybabies over the fact that they're being held to the contracts they signed, presumably of their own free will. No argument here. What baffles me is why people are even up in arms about upgrading - the differences between the iPhone 3G and 3GS are not really earth shattering - you can get a bigger capacity (up to 32 GB), autofocus camera, and the magnetometer... and that's about it. After all the hype over the new phone, I was pretty underwhelmed. Disclosure: I'm an iPhone 3g owner, and I'll be waiting until the next version to upgrade.

  209. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by Trahloc · · Score: 1

    I've never owned an iPhone, personally I'm saving up for the HTC Touch HD. I just use to sell cellphones and have always been annoyed at people who whine about why they can't get the $200 discount 6 months into their 2 year agreement.

    --
    The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
  210. ATT Will lose this case by DVSD91 · · Score: 1

    When the 3G came out, they let all iPhone 1.0 users to upgrade and resign a new 2 year. This will be fixed by the time it comes out. Do you beleive ATT and Apple want A) bad press B) not sell a product?? That is bad business! You just renew for another 2 more years, no big deal. If your like me I will still own a phone after 2 years, so signing up is no issue.

  211. Poetic justice... by Pyroja · · Score: 1

    All of those now stuck with the iPhone 3G are feeling the pain the original iPhone adopters felt last year. What's better? Those who went with the iPhone when it was first released are about to be done with their 2-year contracts, making them eligible for the steep discounts on the NEW iPhone. What's worse? This same thing will happen next year when Apple releases the iPhone 4G.

    --
    [Trojan.]
  212. This is normal -- why are iPhone users so elitist? by hazydave · · Score: 1

    When my Palm 700p died last fall, I didn't get all up in Verizon's grill about giving me a new phone. The rule has been the same pretty since wireless companies started -- you get a subsidy on your new phone, whether it's an iPhone or some disposable Nokia soap-bar phone, in return for signing up for a contract... usually 2-years long. Everyone knows this. iPhone users all upset about no discount on the new model (until their contracts expire) are crybabies, nothing more.

    And if I were inclined to buy an iPhone (which I'm not... maybe an Android phone, we'll see), I could find much more to complain about. How about the fact that, if you're a serious iPhone user, you recharge you iPhone nearly every day, and yet, you'll get only 300-500 charge/discharge cycles out of that sort of Li-Poly cell. That's not going to outlast your contract. Casual users may do better, but I have yet to meet an iPhone user who doesn't charge nearly every day (and I'm surrounded by them, literally).

    There's no case here -- AT&T is doing what every wireless carrier on the planet does. If they budge at all, it would be a business decision... too much bad press, and maybe the rumors of other carriers handling the iPhone soon are true. But I wouldn't hold my breath, and they know very well these guys are pretty much all going to stick with the iPhone, new or old.

    --
    -Dave Haynie
  213. Re:This is normal -- why are iPhone users so eliti by josepha48 · · Score: 1

    Thank you! I'm glad someone gets it. I was actually thinking wah wah, I can't get a new iphone for cheap. Part of the problem is the i in iphone tends to be a phone for self absorbed people (not all). They think they deserve everything.

    --

    Only 'flamers' flame!
    Does slashdot hate my posts?

  214. Im confused by SoulRider · · Score: 1

    So let me see if I have this straight. People want to break their current contract and buy a new phone? And they are complaining that their is a premium attached to this? My contract with AT&T clearly states that if I break my contract there will be penalty charged, a substantial penalty, much more than $200 dollars. It seems to me that AT&T is already offering a discount on the upgrade if its only $200 to break your current contract. When I bought my iPhone I realized that under the current conditions I was not going to be getting the newest model every year.

  215. is it unfair??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have the first generation Iphone that I purchased in march 2009. I am eligible for the upgrade price of 299 for the 32 gig phone and I really want it. The only reason I am not getting it is the 10 bucks a month extra for 3g service. It is not available n my area and I am very, very, very seldom in any area where it is available. I hate paying for a service that is not available. Now that is unfair.

    For those who cannot get the discounted price. At least you will have last years model 3g phone that should get a good price on ebay. Then you can use the difference to get the newest model.

  216. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by iamhassi · · Score: 1

    "personally I'm saving up for the HTC Touch HD."

    Stop now. I upgraded from a Q that would crash constantly to a HTC 6800 running wm 6.1 and it's absolutely horrible. Every time it checks email it pops up a notification whether it's a new email or not, and the notification overrides anything you're doing including making a phone call. So you're typing in the number and the notification pops up and takes over the screen, close out of it and uh-oh your number is gone, start over. I've found a registry hack that's suppose to work but it doesn't.

    I've been desperately seeking something to replace the interface but I've found nothing sufficient. Spb Mobile Shell is close but it doesn't replace the keypad and it doesn't stop the email notification.

    I also can't stand only having a onscreen keyboard or sliding keyboard on the side. On the Q the keys were available and could be used with on hand, so the rare times I was driving and lost I could quickly google name and zip and find the address. That's very difficult to do with a touchscreen and impossible to do with the keyboard sliding to the side. Because of this I'm seriously considering a Palm Pre or Blackberry. The only thing that holds me to Windows Mobile is dashwire, an absolutely essential utility that automatically uploads all calls, contacts, photos, videos, text, etc to a website. Unfortunately it's only WM compatible but if it supported another OS I would be gone.

    --
    my karma will be here long after I'm gone
  217. Or.... live in a state like Massachusetts with by trevize42 · · Score: 1
  218. Tough shit. by JasonEngel · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I completely agree with that post's final sentence: "If you want to upgrade early then you will have to pay full price with no subsidy discount. You can't blame anyone but yourself for your predicament." Every American cell-phone user knows this is standard practice. If you want to buy a new phone from your provider before your contract is up or your upgrade option renews, then you pay the non-subsidized price. I simply do not feel the slightest bit sorry for these whiners who feel that buying an iPhone last June/July somehow makes them special.

  219. Re:This is normal -- why are iPhone users so eliti by britishsoul · · Score: 1

    are people going to discard their old iphones? i'll take them...for free since theyre so eager to have a new one. are they going to chuck their old iphones in the landfill? wow. i dont think its elitism so much as it is consumerism writ large and ugly. what a waste of resources.

    its amazing how current iphone users are blind to what they already have. i cant think of a $300-400 toy that i would replace every year....upgrade my PS3 every year to get a bigger HD? Buy a new PC every year to get an extra .5 ghz? i still have my first gen ipod. i dont see the reason to upgrade as long as it still functions as i expect it (yeah ive replaced the battery twice). and i like my first gen iphone. it still performs well as a phone/email/checker/browser. and my wife wouldnt let me upgrade anyway.

    --
    something looms in middle distance and the future gets nostalgic for what i'd said it'd be...but i could not foresee.
  220. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by The_K4 · · Score: 2, Informative

    So Assume someone got a iPhone 3G on July 11 last year (launch day). That's 11 months So AT&T's Early Termination fee is $175 - ($5 * 11) = $120 So pay the $120 and port your number to a cheap pre-paid. Then once you've paid the fee and closed the AT&T account go back as a "new" customer and get the $200 discount! I left my last cell phone provider and moved to a new one simply because when my phone died with 6 months left on my contract it was cheep to break the contract and buy new phones with a discount at a different provider then to replace the broken phone. I figure using this method people could save $80 (but it may mean being without a working iPhone for a couple of weeks). As a side note, about a week after I ported the numbers I got a mailing from the original provider offering me the "2-year contract price on new phones" and 10% off my old plan if I would come back. Not sure if AT&T does this, but after you port the number you my find them willing to play ball to get you back, but YMMV.

  221. complaints are valid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the issue here is more that every cell phone company's new thing is a two year contract with a discounted phone.

    We're reaching a time where a two year contract is not worth the phone you get with it. Every year there's a splurge of new "in" and "trendy" cell phones. And every year, these are obliterated by next year's model.

    2 year contracts aren't worth it. That's actually what has stopped me from upgrading to any phone with a data plan.

    I'll keep waiting for the prices to go down...

  222. Contract lockup exists regardless of price paid by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Anyone who doesn't understand this and feels its a 'slap in the face' should grow up, it's not like they hide this fact at signup.

    The problem isn't whether or not they hid anything. The problem is that unless things have changed you CANNOT buy an iPhone at any price without the contract extension. The subsidy isn't in exchange for anything. Furthermore it creates a disincentive for me to upgrade my current phone (not an iPhone) which hurts Apple and hurts AT&T because I'm paying less than I would if they didn't have this stupid policy.

    I bought my wife an iPhone 3G shortly after it came out and AT&T wouldn't give me the discounted price despite the fact that I have NEVER bought a subsidized phone from AT&T in 10 years. Without getting into the particulars of why, I bought her iPhone 3G at *full unsubsidized price* but I still am subject to the 2 year lockup. Why? AT&T did not subsidize my purchase so there is no argument to be made that they are being compensated for subsidizing my purchase. Furthermore I've been an AT&T wireless customer for 10 years. Treating your long time customers like this isn't a great way to reduce customer churn.

    1. Re:Contract lockup exists regardless of price paid by Trahloc · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for your local area but out here in California we were able to sell iPhones at full retail price to people who were still within their 2 year agreement. I have been on the sales side and I can say the subsidy IS for a person to sign up to a longer agreement. Otherwise why did they offer $100 off for 1 year and $200 off for 2 year? Or was the sales person you talked to one of the slimey bastards who lied left and right?

      You say you were unable to purchase the phone with a $200 discount AND were forced to sign a two year agreement. Now I can't say 100% but I strongly lean towards you getting cheated. It's possible your location had very few iPhones and a dishonest manager chose to take advantage of that. Again I can't speak for your specific situation but having been one of the people to sell them I know that your experience wasn't universal.

      --
      The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
    2. Re:Contract lockup exists regardless of price paid by sjbe · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for your local area but out here in California we were able to sell iPhones at full retail price to people who were still within their 2 year agreement.

      They've always been willing to sell me a new phone at full retail. That's not the problem. The problem is that if I buy an iPhone my contract gets *extended* by 2 years no matter what price I pay. I have not found a single AT&T or Apple store willing to sell me an iPhone at any price (discounted or full retail) without extending my contract. Additionally getting an iPhone requires a new SIM card. Furthermore if I change any of the terms of service (rate plan, etc) my contract gets extended. I'd consider switching but the others (Sprint, TMobile, Verizon) are no better in my opinion.

      Otherwise why did they offer $100 off for 1 year and $200 off for 2 year?

      Never been an option in any AT&T store I've ever been in - at least not when buying an iPhone. Frankly I wouldn't mind paying extra to avoid the 2 year commitment but it hasn't been an option on the table.

      Or was the sales person you talked to one of the slimey bastards who lied left and right?

      No I'm pretty sure the sales person was not being slimy. Without getting into details I'm quite sure they were just reporting what the database told them.

      You say you were unable to purchase the phone with a $200 discount AND were forced to sign a two year agreement. Now I can't say 100% but I strongly lean towards you getting cheated.

      It was at an Apple store. I'm quite certain I got cheated but I got cheated by AT&T corporate policy. Nice way to treat a 10 year customer who was trying to buy a product from them.

  223. Re:Whoa! ATT sucks balls? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

    As a G1 owner myself, I was going to reply to the AC but you filled in the gaps nicely.

    I had to laugh when the dipstick made the claim that the G1's Linux core is a "poorly coded base OS." Bad tactical move on Slashdot, any way you slice it. Granted, the iPhone's use of BSD Unix was also a solid choice (and in both cases leverages the originating company's design preferences and experience.) But to call the Linux kernel "poorly coded"? Pretty well shot himself in the foot right there, credibility-wise.

    What's hysterical to me is how vehement iPhoner's get in their attacks on the G1. Okay, so there's another phone with a touchscreen and some technical superiority over the iPhone on the market. Why the venom? I mean, this presumption that the so-called Googlephone was some attempt at an "iPhone killer" just shows how flawed their analysis of the situation really is.

    Put it this way: Android was never meant to be a threat to the iPhone, because the iPhone is no threat to Google. Matter of fact, the iPhone supports Google's services nicely, so it wouldn't be in Google's interests to even try and kill it off. No, I'd say the real reason that Google chose to invest in Android and form the Android Alliance is because they wish to head off Windows Mobile. Microsoft wants a bigger slice of Google's pie, and Google felt the need to take a proactive step to prevent that.

    It worked, so far as I'm concerned. I didn't want an iPhone (I dislike Apple about as much as I detest Microsoft, and for many of the same reasons) and was holding off buying a smartphone until something better, something more open, came along. It finally did, and I'm real happy with it. Personally, I find the thought of a fully functional Internet-aware Linux box in the palm of my hand kinda cool.

    The fact that I don't have to kowtow to a hardware manufacturer with an agenda when it comes to the apps I can choose was also very appealing. This idea that Apple has promoted that only applications certified by Apple should run on hardware the users have purchased outright is ridiculous. I also don't like the way they manage their developers. Google was easy: $25 to sign up, and the Dev SDK was free.

    Besides, having received the recent Cupcake OTA update, I can see that Google and HTC intend to make something way cool out of Android. I think I'll stick with it for a while, see where it ends up.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  224. Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It tires me about those whiners complaining about "loyal customers having to pay the higher price for the new iPhones." You might have forgotten that Apple charges 499 and 599 for the two models. ATT actually subsidized your last purchase to the tune of $200 to $300 per phone so you could pay 199. or 299. last time. They fronted you the cash and in turn you committed to a contact for 18 month to 2 years. You in essence are paying them back and then giving them their profit. You really don't need the latest hardware, so wait until you can purchase for the cheaper price after you fullfill your commitment. ATT and Apple are not non-profits. This is the same with EVERY subsidized phone.

  225. what did ya all think was gonna happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you combined Steve Jobs - the man who denied Lisa was his daughter *AND* screwed The Woz outta money he was due + AT&T who's crimes VS the citizens resulted in the break up via the Government - what did ya think was gonna happen?

    Unicorns shooting rainbows out their butts?

  226. Bikeman1969 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm a current 3g iphone user (8gb). AT&T are fools for not allowing the same price. ok I want to upgrade to the 3g S 16gb model. I won't for $399 which is what they are offering me as an early discount (not a full discount, $199). I won't do it, Iâ(TM)ll wait. But if they did what do you think i would do with my old phone, just toss it away, NOT. I would sell it which most likely end up on the AT&T network under a different user's plan, which will bring in more revenue in the form of Data plan charges. yes some may end up on T-mobile and unlocked but most will stay with AT&T in my opinion. So, that's my 2-cents. I hope they smarten up.

  227. Liars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I called the b******* and they said its "in our contract with apple, we cant give you that pricing"

  228. Use you heads people!!!!!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its very damn easy, use your head, go destroy your iphone!!!
    Later, call ATT and tell them it broke! they will send you a brand new Iphone for the same price price that you paid before and they will not send you a iphone 3g, you will get the new 3gs phone

    You see how easy it is... :)

    And att will have to stop your account and not charging you or give you back your iphone
    and of course they prefer to send you the new iphone then loosing you as a Customer

    Have a Good day.

  229. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by elanghe · · Score: 1

    My big complaint is, if they are going to charge me either with or without the contract for the price of the hardware, why should they be able to limit what I can do with it.

  230. Re:BooHoo OPEN UP the iPhone... even more... by davidsyes · · Score: 1

    In response to Icebike and MrCrassic, one way current iPhone users could revolt is to en mass start contributing $25 to an escrow account set up to pay developers or some network that will write software to shift all iPhones enrolled into a new, mesh, non-major-isp supported network. Maybe the packets WILL inevitably have to travel over an existing net, but if the contract terminates, and the new software turns the 3G and earlier model into something akin to a portable computer, maybe even better than the 3G S, and if that phone is on a new network not under Apple's nor under AT&T's control, then i wonder whether Apple or AT&T would have any legal right (or immunity) to brick those phones that are explicitly removed from AT&T's subscription. If the phones are tethered (by ID) and enrolled into a data bank (say, with a court or with the FCC or some cognizant agency of the government that might take a dim view on Apple or AT&T or any carrier crying foul or soul grapes fucking around with hardware that is NOT theirs...) the business model, the blueprints TO the phone still remain AT&T's and Apple's property, but the SOLD PHONE is NNNNNOTTTt any longer their property to fuck with once it's off-contract.

    Now, the only way to combat that would be if Apple built in a time-bomb that starts ticking when the phone is initially activated and told what its self-destruct date is, which might be the contract expiry date + 24 hours, or some nonsense like that.

    This "repurposing" of "old" iPhones, and older iPods might be a way for "green" types of people to contribute their "old" hardware to developing nations -- provided the donation area has towers or mesh nets that can actually talk to the phone. Heck, it might even change some domestic tax/donation valuation codes. If the iPhone sold at $699 is worth the same as one sold at $199, or vice versa, then what is the real value of the physical phone when sold or donated after 2 years. Maybe if enough green Apple fans en mass might start a trend where for various reasons the IRS or other tax organs may be shunned into permitting a tax break for the donor. OTOH, if no tax break is allowed for overseas recipients, then maybe schools could be wired to handle these phones as teaching assistance devices. Might create new business models. But, it'll have to be quick, decisive, and well-funded to prevent an Apple counter attack. If Apple hasn't got a big enough lobby in Washington, then it's possible that someone can orchestrate a political movement to start embarrassing manufacturers that design nearly un-upgradable hardware when software should do much more of the upgrading than fancy shell-change games. If anything, the phone body recycling market needs to be improved so all that plastic and the toxic internals are deal with.

    In fairness to Apple, it could tell all the more snively/nasally of its fans to STFU or the two could work together to offset the cost of obtaining a 3G S iPhone. More, even if Apple reduced the 3G S to $199 for ALL takers, what becomes of all the now 'obsoleted' pre-3G S iPhones? There might be the possibility that 80% every single previously-sold iPhone ends up in the trash, because THAT many of them can't feasibly be recycled (possibly this negates my recycling suggestion above...)... But, if that many CAN be recovered and given new life, they definitely then belong in the hands of schools that receive them as nearly-crippled, and for-schoo-use-only, if some support will be made for leaving slack room for new product hardware sales.

    Anyway...

    --
    Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
  231. StarTac redux by vaporland · · Score: 1

    Remember when Motorola went from the MicroTac (which was anything but micro) to the StarTac?

    The first StarTacs were $1200. Next gen was $600, then $250, then $99, then they went away, now Motorola is going away too.

    As far as I am concerned, the StarTac was the height of evolution of the cellular phone.

    --
    Ask Me About... The 80's!
  232. Re:BooHoo Go Bananas... by davidsyes · · Score: 1

    Well, there you go... start selling banana-shaped protectors for iPhones, and they will fit in the palm and the grip of a hand. Sexy, AND sensual iPhone... Call it an iBone... iGrip.... But, it might make Apple go bananas... Now, for the adult market, you could sell iPhal for the iBone that was the iPhone.... Might make for a backup income stream in this and the next economy...

    --
    Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
  233. Re:BooHoo Huh? by davidsyes · · Score: 1

    "Its not like they're selling you a $200 iPhone for $400. They're selling you a $400 iPhone for $400, with a discount for signing a NEW contract. Jeez."

    I say they're selling a ***$100* for $400. If the phone didn't come from Apple, or if it looked crappy, but contained the same interface, i bet it would not sell for very long at $400. It might drop to $100, then lower, until they made it obsolete and vigorously replaced it at a higher cost. But, i suppose the software AND the look are what drive this craze for an iPhone, and it sure helps Apple that it came from Apple. I wonder if the iPhone would sell as well if microsoft and Apple secretly sold it as a microsoft product but Apple got paid behind the scenes... (Yeh, i realize it wouldn't remain a secret for more than a few weeks... internal revolt by Apple employees, leaks by contract manufacturers, etc...)

    At $199, it's pretty damned tempting to switch to AT&T, but that is still pricey for me. Now, if it got subsidized down to $100 or $150, and had a decent ~$50/month plan and if i could mix/match my music/media files (protected and unprotected mp3s, etc...) and if the contract contained clause that said if i verifiably moved to an area not served by them (domestically or overseas, my choice), and all i had to pay wasn an ETF of NO MORE THAN $200, maybe... maybe i might definitely buy that phone and drop my hangups over AT&T....

    --
    Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
  234. Pay the Man! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How ridiculous is all this dribble. If you wanna dance, pay the band. $499 is better than $699. Who the hell needs a compass anyway. I never had one before..... and I'm sure I'll be OK with the 3G anyway!. The new OS will be sweet enough for free!!! Move on! phone people,.... move along now.... By the time the apps come out that make it irresistible you'll be eligible for an upgrade. Don't even start whining about the camera differences. If you need a nice digital camera - they're cheap enough. Deal with it! ..... It's a phone for God's sake,..... or else "Pay the Man!,.... Everybody's Gotta Pay the Man"

  235. Or sign up for a 1-year contract by lpq · · Score: 1

    I usually split the difference when I buy a new cell-phone. I force them into a 1-year agreement &
    split the difference on the phone cost.

    At least verizon has been willing to do this, but AT&T & Apple have a monopoly on the iPhone (which is substantially different from a generic 'smartphone', though one might argue that it's a mixed bag of benefits and deficits) -- like, perhaps, AT&T's monopoly position on offering the phone and their ability to dictate terms -- rather than being willing to negotiate or be reasonable with customers.

  236. UK users (on the O2 network) have NO upgrade path by SoloJon · · Score: 1

    AT&T is a greedy bitch. My US cousins have to pay close to $100 for "fair use" usage on their phones-- but at least you guys have an upgrade path. Current iPhone 3G users here in the UK are forced by their cell phone provider, O2, to wait until 1 month before their contract ends before they can negotiate a switch. Of course since the contracts are 18 months, for most early adopters that means January 2010. I don't know why, but this makes me furious. Oh well, patience is a virtue, I suppose.

  237. Go to Apple and complain by DrStoooopid · · Score: 1

    Look at it this way. If the service provider is being unfair to the customer, then go to the partner. Apple is embedded with ATT, so if ATT won't give people what they want, then Apple who is in essence represented by ATT, would naturally be the one to complain to. After all, if ATT makes Apple look bad, then Apple won't want to partner with them exclusively...perhaps breaking ties, or or opening up the iPhone to other carriers. Without ATT customers, then there are no iPhone customers, and if you make it clear that you won't be buying any more services from ATT if they don't change their policies, this will hurt iPhone's sales..and Apple doesn't want that.

    I hear Androids and Pre's aren't bad.

    --
    There are 2 groups of people you can make fun of on the Internet without fear of attack. The illiterate, and the Amish.
  238. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by Trahloc · · Score: 1

    While my love of freedom agrees with you and I believe a person should have the *legal* right to unlock a phone/console/whatever. I also believe that a company like apple or at&t has the right to make it a royal bitch for you to do it. It should be up to the market to decide if DRM/proprietary things should survive, it shouldn't be legislated in or out.

    --
    The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
  239. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by Trahloc · · Score: 1

    You sound a lot like a friend of mine who loved his Q and made many of the points you made. I believe this is just a matter of personal taste. The Q's one handed typing ability isn't a selling point for me. If I'm driving and have to text I just use my knee to hold the steering wheel and look straight ahead. Since I'm using two hands all my practiced blind qwerty typing experience transfers over perfectly and I rarely make mistakes. And for all those naysayes, if I suddenly had to brake its really easy to toss my phone and grab the wheel, no different than if you were driving one handed.

    As for the email issues, they didn't bother me. I used an HTC Tytn for years and was perfectly happy with it.

    --
    The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
  240. Re:ONLY in the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone is looking at the backwards. The real problem is not demanding that the US cell phone industry works the way the rest of the world does. Nowhere else is the cell phone tied to a carrier. In Europe, you buy your phone, you buy your service. The carrier gives you a chip for your phone to talk to their network. How hard a concept is that? Maybe if everyone dinged their congressmen, we could break through the phone company lobbyists.

  241. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by DarkVader · · Score: 1

    So, here's the slap in the face:

    If I upgrade early, I'm paying full price for the phone, there is no subsidy. That's fine, I have no problem with that. I'm not yet at the point in my contract that they'll give me another subsidy on the phone.

    But... The phone is still subsidy locked to AT&T. I've just paid full unsubsidized price for it, it's mine. They shouldn't be allowed to lock the phone at that point.

    THAT is a slap in the face.

  242. I was offered the lower prices with an $18 fee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have an original (Edge, not 3G) iPhone, which I purchased in late January 2008. Previously I had been with Verizon. I logged in to my AT&T account today, clicked "Check Upgrade Options", and got this message:

    iPhone Upgrade
    As a valued AT&T customer, we can offer you an iPhone upgrade with a new 2-year commitment and an $18 upgrade fee.


    I was then offered the advertised prices (199, 2999, 99).

    Keep in mind I haven't even finish 18 months of my original 2 year contract, yet I'm apparently considered "near the end" of it. I don't think they're screwing everyone quite so badly as you all think...

  243. Wonderful World of Cellery Phones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Welcome to the wonderful world of cellular.

    The fact of the matter is that those phones are heavily discounted and the company hopes for reimbursement after you fulfill a full contract.

    There are formulas to this and it is mostly about the cellery phone companies recouping their expenses for the hardware.

    If you really want to blame someone blame the manufactures for holding the cell phones companies by their 'dice' for pricing.

    One of the worse thing that ever happened in the industry was the free cell phone.

    What I think we should do is pay full retail and let the competition of cell phone companies work out the $$, and sign no contract. If we do sign a contract it will be for a discount on SERVICE and not on HARDWARE.

    It's not like I work for a cell phone company or anything ;P

  244. Re:anonymous coward angry over first post by Trahloc · · Score: 1

    Absolutely agreed. Which is why I see no moral dilemma when it comes to hacking a phone for any personal purpose you want to put it towards.

    --
    The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
  245. Whomsoever excuses AT&T here... scares me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You can't blame anyone but yourself for your predicament."

    Um. Dumbass, we can blame AT&T for promoting the new version with a marketing scheme that creates inequitable prices based on factors that could not have been predicted ahead of time. So yes, it's their fault for not doing this better. Did they think they could give even one person a discount that others don't get and NOT hear crying? What the fuck? What the fuck is WRONG WITH YOU PEOPLE? Do you always bend over backwards to excuse corporate assholery? You know, you might want to check every morning to see if you've become a slave.

  246. iPhone? Heh, fanboi... by marxmarv · · Score: 1

    ... my T-Mobile phone runs Linux and yours doesn't.

    --
    /. -- the Free Republic of technology.
  247. Not any more by Savior_on_a_Stick · · Score: 1

    Apple pulled it from the App Store.

  248. Re:BooHoo OPEN UP the iPhone... even more... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm curious, how do you think a mesh network made up of phones would work? Presumably it would have to use wifi, since the GSM and 3G radios operate on licensed bands and it would almost certainly be illegal to re-purpose the device to form a mesh network using them. Let's say the average distance between nodes is 50 meters and you need to call your friend 300 miles away. By my calculations, the call would have to pass through over 9650 nodes, assuming a very low latency of 1ms per hop that would be a 10 second delay before what you say reaches your friend, meaning a 20 second delay before receiving a reply to what you say. Is this reasonable for a phone network? There are other problems, e.g. lack of bandwidth to handle the amount of users, and more importantly the effect that constant wifi usage for the mesh network would have on battery life.