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Iphone Businesses Apple Technology

Apple Might Debut 3 New iPhones in 2019 (fortune.com) 64

Apple is planning to release three new iPhone models this year, including a device to succeed the newly-created XR model, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter. From a report: Apple will unveil direct successors to last year's iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, and iPhone XR, The Wall Street Journal is reporting. The iPhone XR, which is believed to have been the least popular of the three, will be updated with a model that comes with the same LCD display and similar design, according to the report. Apple is also considering adding a triple-lens camera system to one of the 2019 models in a bid to compete with Samsung and others that are readying similar camera systems, the Journal's sources said.
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Apple Might Debut 3 New iPhones in 2019

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  • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Friday January 11, 2019 @04:15PM (#57946514)

    The iPhone XR, which is believed to have been the least popular of the three, will be updated with a model that comes with the same LCD display and similar design.

    It doesn't appear as though Apple has learned anything.

    Maybe another year of decreased sales will help them get the message.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      That at these prices people will expect to keep these phones for a couple years. So what they really need to do is produce a much better and more impressive model in ~2 years so they get all the sales then after the 'financial pressure' of this past upgrade cycle is past, while providing price drops on their current phones to pull in any users who might otherwise defect when they find the need to upgrade (intentionally or not.)

      • by lusid1 ( 759898 )

        I'd mod you up if I could because this is exactly correct. At current price points it is no longer a device you cycle out every 12-24 months, its now in the 24-36month bucket, or until it completely dies.
        If they want to charge $1250 for a midrange phone that's their choice, but they shouldn't be so surprised when people decide to keep using the old one for an extra year.
        They need to be planning now to figure out how to recover those deferred sales on the next cycle if they want keep those people in the eco

        • I moved from 4s to SE (refurbished) just last month and am happy how fast the new phone is, can do everything I need. Hope the SE will serve me for at least 3-4 years.

    • What "The Economist" thinks:

      https://www.economist.com/lead... [economist.com]

    • Believed by who? Cook has said the XR was the most popular iPhone every single day since it started shipping. Lying about that would be a major securities violation if it were discovered to be untrue, so we can take him at his word. Sales may not be what they expected, but the iPhone XR is their most popular phone this quarter, end of story.

  • When you're scared and don't know where the enemy is...this is a fine strategy.
  • But seems to be gaining as the favorite of the generation, from what I've read.

  • Don't they always release 3 phones. an "SE", Regular, and Super-Size?

    iPhone XI, XS, and XS-Max

    oh oh -- I'll bet they do it in October too.

    • And another crystal-ball reading says "the CPUs will be faster, the batteries last a bit longer, and camera is better"

      yawn.

    • I've suggested this before they should just have have the same models and attach a year to it with incremental upgrades like auto manufacturers do with cars. The whole new model thing is costly and passe and nobody cares anymore.
      • by msauve ( 701917 )
        They're already following automakers - edge-to-edge screens and thinness are the modern equivalent of late 1950's tail fins. It's all about some sort of "style" pissing match, function and practicality be damned.
  • by xack ( 5304745 ) on Friday January 11, 2019 @05:26PM (#57946964)
    The SE form factors, but with X features. It will sell billions.
  • by alaskana98 ( 1509139 ) on Friday January 11, 2019 @05:36PM (#57947012)
    Although you can arguably say that Apple invented the smartphone as we know it, they are now mired in an endless game of tug-of-war with their rivals Samsung and the rest of the Android clan. This is unfortunate because I feel they are pumping the lions share of their considerable resources into simply keeping up with the competitors that originally copied their ground breaking concept of what a phone could be.
    I feel Apple needs to somehow break free of this endless 'boring' update cycle and release their newest earth shattering product. The only problem is I doubt the current leadership at Apple has what it takes to do this. Although nice, Bluetooth earbuds, smart speakers, and smart watchers and endless iterations of iPhones, iPads and laptops ain't going to cut it. They are going to need another device that is as paradigm shifting as the original iPhone was. I think if they still had Jobs this may have happened by now, but really who knows. I feel within the next 5 years or so Apple WILL need this type of product or they will again become increasingly irrelevant as they were in the mid to late 90's before the advent of the iPod rescued them from certain death. (Full disclosure - I own Apple products).
    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Friday January 11, 2019 @07:19PM (#57947618)

      Although you can arguably say that Apple invented the smartphone as we know it, they are now mired in an endless game of tug-of-war with their rivals Samsung and the rest of the Android clan. This is unfortunate because I feel they are pumping the lions share of their considerable resources into simply keeping up with the competitors that originally copied their ground breaking concept of what a phone could be.
      I feel Apple needs to somehow break free of this endless 'boring' update cycle and release their newest earth shattering product.

      The thing is, Apple didn't actually invent the smartphone-as-we-know-it. It was an evolutionary development that other phone manufacturers had slowly been migrating towards. LG was actually the first [wikipedia.org] out the door with a smartphone with a capacitive touch display as its primary interface. And the Samsung evidence which was disallowed in the iPhone case (because they missed a filing deadline) showed that they had been working on similar iPhone-like phones before the introduction of the iPhone.

      What Apple did (very successfully) was guess where this evolutionary development would lead in the future, and bet the house on a phone design further along this development path than any other phone manufacturer's at the time. And that bet rightly led to a massive financial windfall for them.

      Since then, they have missed pretty much every other major evolutionary change to smartphone design. They openly ridiculed the trend towards larger phones (a phone with a 3.5" screen looks like a toy today). They missed the trend towards a wider aspect ratio. They've been hostile to a universal phone charging connector. They were late to follow the trend towards capacitive control buttons (instead of physical buttons). They were slower than the rest of the industry in adding LTE capability. They were late to incorporate NFC. They missed the trend towards OLED displays on flagship devices. They missed the trend towards bezel-less displays. They've played catch-up on all of these features.

      They did get the trend to high-resultion displays right (though I'd argue that was obvious, and they just did it quicker than anyone else due to a design flaw in iOS). They helped make fingerprint sensors (which first showed up on a Motorola phone but was a niche product) standard. And I applaud their approach to security and privacy. But pretty much all their other "innovations" have been hostile to customers (glass back, non-swappable battery, removing the headphone jack, lack of expandable memory, lack of a way to directly transfer files between devices, walled garden for apps).

      • While I agree in principle it's worth remembering that those hostile features made the devices incredibly desirable in the view of customers. They may be hostile to certain customers, but for the vast majority of them for a long time they have been giving them exactly what they want: a status symbol even shinier than that last.

  • I don't give a shit if they debut 300 new phones this year, I'm just not into Apple's offerings.

    Apple products seem to cost too much $$$ for what you get, they're too locked down, they're not expandable, few if any replaceable parts, and I hate having to wear a turtleneck.

  • by greenwow ( 3635575 ) on Friday January 11, 2019 @06:18PM (#57947298)

    https://www.apple.com/iphone/compare/ [apple.com]

    And Apple stores took down the signs showing which model is which and the prices. I went in December to buy a new phone, but I couldn't tell which model was which or how much they cost. This will make their model confusion even worse.

    • Can you really put a price on owning an Apple product?
      If you had to ask what that price was, can you really consider yourself an Apple customer?

      If you want a phone for a price buy Android. This here is an Apple, and that is all you need to know about it.

  • by trawg ( 308495 ) on Friday January 11, 2019 @06:21PM (#57947312) Homepage

    My family bought my mum an Apple Watch for Christmas. Unfortunately I didn't check the label and it wasn't suitable for her phone - she had an iPhone 5S, and the new Watch requires an iPhone 6. Something we only found out on Christmas day.

    So we arranged to get her a phone upgrade. It was complicated - I'm an Android user and while I keep half an ear out about Apple stuff, I kind of assumed there was just the iPhone X and a couple of variants.

    But it turns out you can buy everything from an iPhone 7 up! There's the 7, 7+, 8, 8+, XR, XS, and XS Max. And of course for each model there are the different size variants. And colour variants.

    So we had massive choice paralysis. Which of these is the best thing to get? What is the best long term investment? It seems like if I buy a 7, it is going to be "obsolete" the soonest. But the X series start at AUD$1000 and that seems like a ludicrous amount for a non-power-user who is actually perfectly happy with her iPhone 5S.

    If the Watch hadn't been a consideration, I probably also would have thrown some Android options into the mix - if you already have to factor in a bunch of things, why not a couple more?!?

    I'm sure Apple have a bunch of genius-level people that decide on their product line-up that know way more than me. But just from my experience, going through the process once it seems like a risky play to have so many choices beyond how many gigs and what colour the device should be. Making the response to "I need a new iPhone" really simple for everyone seems as important to me as making them all "Just Work".

    • But it turns out you can buy everything from an iPhone 7 up! There's the 7, 7+, 8, 8+, XR, XS, and XS Max. And of course for each model there are the different size variants. And colour variants. So we had massive choice paralysis.

      Must be a nightmare to go clothes shopping with you.

      What is the best long term investment? It seems like if I buy a 7, it is going to be "obsolete" the soonest. But the X series start at AUD$1000 and that seems like a ludicrous amount for a non-power-user who is actually perfectly happy with her iPhone 5S.

      AIEEE! Stop thinking of a phone (any brand) as an "investment" for CRIPES[sic] sake. It's an expense! There is no inherent ROI (look that up if you don't understand finance). Any phone only truly becomes "obsolete" when it stops working, i.e., stops doing what you bought it to do in the first place. On the other hand, if you simply must have the latest and greatest at all times then praise to you, brother. You're one of the drivers behind a strong eco

    • I'm an Android user and while I keep half an ear out about Apple stuff, I kind of assumed there was just the iPhone X and a couple of variants.

      You seem to have that in common with lots of Slasdot readers.

      On slashdot you will find complainers saying that Apple raised prices. The reality is that Apple lowered the prices for iPhone 7, 7+, 8 and 8+, replaced the X with a better model. AND introduced some slightly more expensive top of the range model, and a cheaper model.

      And yes, replacement cycles get longer which means fewer phones are sold. And with longer cycles, people can afford more expensive phones.

  • Your price point is way too high. When you set your initial market price too high, your sales plummet. Since it really costs a very small fraction to actually make the phone, you reduce the price.

    This isn't rocket science. Just classic economics.

    Sell it for $500.

  • In other news Apple might not debut 3 new iPhones in 2019!

  • I know this is rather unlikely but it would so make my day if by some miracle
    Apples new product rollouts happen on the same day the supreme court decides against them.

  • The three 2018 model year iPhones will be replaced with three pretty much near-identical 2019 model year iPhones. Wow.

    If only car companies could get away with introducing the same car every year as a brand new product, and have all customers on one-year leases.

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