Verizon Wireless customers can expect a high-speed Apple iPhone sooner or
later, Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg suggested
at an April 6 press conference.
“It’s [Apple’s] call,” Seidenberg said, according to Reuters. “Eventually it’s our view we’ll get
to carrying Apple.”
Seidenberg reportedly went on to say that he’d ideally like a version of the
iPhone that can support 4G LTE (Long-Term Evolution) technology. Verizon
has confirmed that it will soon begin rolling out its 4G network and plans
to cover approximately 100 million people, across 25 to 30 markets, by the end
of 2010.
Seidenberg’s comments added fuel to a fire sparked long ago but most
recently fanned by a March 29 report from the Wall Street Journal, which said
Apple was working on two new iPhones, an updated version for AT&T,
expected to be released this summer, and a version based on CDMA technology,
which Verizon could release in early 2011, or as soon as AT&T’s exclusivity
contract with Apple expires.
Analysts have agreed that an iPhone on the Verizon network would benefit both
parties, potentially doubling Apple’s U.S.
market share by 2011, according to analyst Neil Mawston, with Strategy
Analytics. For Apple competitors, however, it could dangerously raise the bar.
Should Verizon get an iPhone, Mawston
told eWEEK, “Samsung, LG, Motorola, RIM and Palm will all have to up their
game at Verizon to fend off an attack from Apple.”
The press conference at which Seidenberg was quoted was called to discuss the
potential of a Verizon Wireless merger with Vodafone, which owns 45 percent of
Verizon Wireless, to Verizon’s 55 percent. A merger, however, seemed far less
likely than a Verizon iPhone.
“Absent new information,” Seidenberg told those present, regarding Vodafone, “a
merger doesn’t seem to have a lot of appeal.”
Editor's Note: A correction has been made to reflect that Verizon's current
network is based on CDMA technology.