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Business / World Business

iPhone 6s and 6s Plus hit stores

Published: 26 Sep 2015 - 01:30 am | Last Updated: 17 Nov 2021 - 06:46 pm
Peninsula

Brianna Lempesis, from San Diego, appears on a video screen on her “Beam” robot, while waiting in line to purchase an iPhone 6s at the Apple Retail in Palo Alto, California, yesterday. Lempesis made the purchase via the screen and the phone was attached to a hook on the robot. RIGHT: The iPhone 6s on display at the Apple Store in Chicago, Illinois.

SAN FRANCISCO/SYDNEY: The iPhone 6s and 6s Plus hit stores around the world yesterday, at the start of what is expected to be a record weekend for sales of Apple Inc’s marquee product.
Eager buyers — joined by at least one robot — flocked to Apple stores from Sydney to New York, itching to get their hands on new models boasting a 3D touch feature and an improved camera.
“The first thing I’m going to do is take a picture,” said Lithuanian student Justina Siciunaite, 25, the first of hundreds to emerge with an iPhone 6s from Apple’s flagship store on New York’s Fifth Avenue.
Analysts expect 12 million to 13 million phones to fly off the shelves in the first weekend, up from more than 10 million last year when the launch of the hugely successful iPhone 6 was delayed in China, the world’s biggest smartphone market. Among the first to pick up the new iPhone 6s in a cold, rainy Sydney was a telepresence robot named Lucy, operated by marketing executive Lucy Kelly.
“I obviously have my work and other things to attend to and can’t spend two days lining up so my boss at work suggested I take one of the robots down and use it to stand in my place,” she said, via an iPad mounted on top of the wheeled robot.
After a dramatic redesign last year, which included an enlarged screen and the addition of mobile payments, the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus boast more modest improvements.
The phones, which are the same size as last year’s models, feature 3D touch, a display technology based on a “Taptic Engine” that responds according to how hard users press their screens.
However, several reviewers have said the new features might not be compelling enough to persuade iPhone 6 users to upgrade.
“You might not feel the usual pull to get a new iPhone unless you really want a better front-facing camera,” Nilay Patel of The Verge said in a review published on Tuesday. 
Apple has said just a fraction of its customers have upgraded to the iPhone 6, suggesting there is room to grow. More important than customer appetite for upgrades is the iPhone’s “proliferation” outside the United States, particularly in China, said Aaron Rakers, an analyst at Stifel Nicolaus & Co.
Hundreds gathered outside the Apple store in San Francisco. Among them was pink-haired software developer Jo Engo, 37, who has lobbied Apple leaders past and present for a phone in his favourite colour. “I have emailed not only Steve Jobs but Tim Cook,” Engo said outside the store. “I’m so excited they’re finally doing it.” Phones in rose-gold — an approximation of pink — proved popular at stores in New York and San Francisco.
FBR Capital Markets senior analyst Daniel Ives said the color was a “major selling point.”
Repair firm iFixit, which opened up an iPhone 6s and 6s Plus yesterday, said battery capacity was down “a bit”, probably to accommodate the Taptic Engine. Apple has said battery life is unchanged in the new phones.
The iPhone 6s also houses NAND flash memory chips made by Toshiba Corp, while the iPhone 6 used memory chips made by SanDisk Corp. The 6s and 6s Plus start at $199 and $299 respectively with a two-year service-provider contract. Reuters