Apple sold more than 2 million iPhone 5 smartphones in the first 24 hours it was available for preorder. The figure was more than double the record set by the iPhone 4S.
Apple sold more than 2 million iPhone 5 smartphones in the first 24 hours
that it was available for preorder. This was more than double the record set by
the iPhone 4S nearly a year ago, Apple said in a Sept. 17 statement.
AT&T announced the same morning that customers had ordered record
numbers of iPhone 5s over the weekend, making it the
fastest-selling
iPhone the carrier has ever offered.
After its Sept. 12 introduction, the iPhone 5 became available for
preorder Sept. 14, just after midnight on the West Coast.
"Customers ordered more iPhones from AT&T than any previous model
both on its first day of preorders and over the weekend," said AT&T.
On the Apple site,
stocks
were depleted after just an hour of availability, and Apple changed the
ship date on the site from Sept. 21 to "two weeks."
"Demand for iPhone 5 exceeds the initial supply and while the majority
of pre-orders will be delivered to customers on September 21," Apple said
in its statement, "many are scheduled to be delivered in October."
Nearly a year ago, Apple announced that preorders for the iPhone 4S exceeded
1 million phones in the first day, breaking the record of the year
before-orders for more than 600,000 iPhone 4 smartphones after its release.
Verizon Wireless and Sprint also began offering the iPhone 5 Sept. 14,
though neither has shared news about their sales efforts just yet.
Research firm IHS iSuppli has forecast strong sales for the iPhone 5,
writing in a Sept. 13 research note that phone will be a "major success in
the market, helping to drive Apple's smartphone shipments in 2012 to 149
million units, up 60 percent from 93 million in 2011."
IHS added that Apple will begin selling the iPhone 5 with just over one week
left in its fiscal third quarter, so that most of the sales will impact its
fourth quarter, making it "Apple's biggest quarter for iPhone sales in
history."
Despite Android's dominance in the marketplace-
according to Gartner,
more than 64 percent of the mobile devices that shipped during the second
quarter ran Google's Android OS-IHS calls Apple's iOS "still the most
valuable mobile content marketplace."
The iPhone 5 features a 4-inch display (on the diagonal), a first for Apple,
which has maintained a 3.5-inch display on past models. The larger display will
accommodate older applications, though Apple has offered developers a fix, for a
more perfect experience.
"The new iPhone will support old apps via the addition of a ribbon so
as to preserve the original aspect ratio," wrote Jack Kent, an IHS senior
analyst. "While this will maintain the experience, it does fall short of
the flawless hardware-software integration that a vertically integrated model
like Apple's should provide."
Also imperfect will be the iPhone 5's support of Long-Term Evolution (LTE)
4G technology-another first. While Apple's support for LTE will help increase
support for the technology, according to IHS, only European operators with 4G
deployments on the 1,800MHz band will be compatible with the iPhone 5's LTE
capabilities.
"This will affect the competitive position of carriers," said the
IHS report. "Those that have LTE networks compatible with the iPhone 5
will benefit at the expense of those that either have not launched LTE or have
LTE networks that operate on incompatible frequencies."
Apple will begin selling the iPhone 5 at 356 U.S. Apple retail stores at 8
a.m. Friday, Sept. 21.
"iPhone 5 is the best iPhone yet, the most beautiful product we've ever
made," Philip Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of marketing, said
in a statement, "and we hope customers love it as much as we do."