...I'm talking about Sprint, Verizon, Alltel, T-Mobile, and Suncom, in addition to AT&T of course... Do you think most of the nation's population will be using an iPhone?
Most? No, of course not.
If I'm not mistaken, the 3G technology -- ¿and therefore the new 3G iPhone? -- is compatible with both GSM and CDMA, so that would eliminate any technological incompatibility. (And if I am mistaken, I'm sure someone can correct me.) As someone else pointed out, Alltel & Verizon (who are about to merge) use CDMA technology, and I'm pretty sure that Sprint has their own proprietary version of CDMA, whereas AT&T uses GSM technology.
Even if DSM vs CDMA weren't an issue, there would be people who don't like the touch screen and want buttons, people who prefer something thicker but shorter like a flip-phone, people who dislike Apple, people who want the cheapest phone, etc.
... My opinion on the issue is that people who currently do not have the iPhone and are with other networks are either a.) locked into a contract with another provider and don't want to pay the fee to get out of it or b.) already with the best provider in their area, which is not AT&T
c.) We currently do not have the iPhone because there is no AT&T service in our area at all. Where we live, there's Alltel and US Cellular.
If we could get AT&T service -- and
keep it -- we would, just so we could have iPhones. Getting it is easy; keeping it is another matter. AT&T has coverage all around us, as close as 20 miles away. Friends who have gone to neighboring communities to get AT&T service have had their service terminated after a couple of months, per AT&T's terms & conditions:
"Usage: If your minutes of use (including unlimited services) on other carrier networks ("off-net usage") during any two consecutive months exceeds your off-net usage allowance, AT&T may at its option terminate your service, deny your continued use of other carriers' coverage, or change your plan to one imposing usage charges for off-net usage. Your off-net usage allowance is equal to the lesser of 750 minutes or 40% of the Anytime Minutes included with your plan. AT&T will provide notice that it intends to take any of the above actions, and you may terminate the agreement."
Since AT&T coverage is pretty spotty in several areas, I think it's too bad Apple didn't do an exclusive GSM deal w/ AT&T and another exclusive CDMA deal w/ Verizon.
(it's a known fact that in different areas some providers are much better ... AT&T might suck in one area, and might be the best in another)
CDMA carriers seem to have a lot fewer dropped calls than DSM carriers -- something to do with calls per channel, I guess. The people I know w/ AT&T do seem to have more dropped calls. Even so -- and even though it would cost me $200 to get out of my Alltel contract -- I would still switch to AT&T just to get an iPhone and I know my husband would too.
Of course you have the few who don't see the iPhone as the "best phone" and would rather make do with iPhonies (Instinct, Voyager, Glide, Dare, etc.), but screw them. We all know the iPhone is the best phone out right now
We have flip phones w/ Alltel, but as soon as Verizon & Alltel merge, we will upgrade to iPhonies. I'm not sure which one we'll get, but I can tell you it will
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