Fri Jul 11, 2008 1:43PM EDT
See Comments (24)
As an effort to thwart users from purchasing iPhones and illicitly unlocking them for use on other carriers (and to escape paying service fees to AT&T), Apple and AT&T decided that, with the iPhone 3G, phones would have to be activated in the store at the time of purchase.
This isn't such a stretch from a policy standpoint: Most cell phones need to be activated when you pick them up, otherwise they won't work. But most phones don't have lines around the block made up of people who'd kill to get their hands on the things. Apple obviously saw this coming, so it found a way around the problem: Its setup from last year, which let people activate the phone and select their service plan in a more liesurely atmosphere, was pure genius (even though a few people naturally complained of trouble getting the activation to work).
Well, the alternative, to go back to the traditional cell phone activation scheme, is already looking like a disaster. Bloggers are reporting widespread, catastrophic problems with the in-store activation process. At Gizmodo, early purchasers are reporting total havoc in stores as activations fail. The phones can't be activated in stores, and some purchasers are being allowed to take them home... where they still won't activate. One report says that every computer in a Boston Apple Store is "stuck in the iPhone activation screen."
For the precious few who are seeing lines actually moving, they're moving slow. If you expect to buy an iPhone 3G today, better plan to wait. Buyers are reporting that people who actually make it inside may spend over an hour getting their phone activated.
Disaster? Absolutely. Gizmodo notes though that it's not even the people buying new phones that are the problem, it's the fact that Apple brilliantly decided to release a major firmware update for all iPhones on the same day as releasing a new model. Millions of existing iPhone users are upgrading their software at home while Apple tries to use the same servers to activate new models. It's not a big deal if a home user has to wait an extra hour, but those in line are suffering for the goof-up.
Best advice, iPhone shoppers: Go home before you blow the entire day in line. Try again next week.
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Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
WARNING!!!!!!!!!!!!!Stay away from the 2.0 upgrade. I'm 3 hours into an upgrade and restore. In short, in the final stages of upgrading the phone wants to go out to the Istore to reregister I believe. The process is f!?!?!?. Shame on you Steve Jobs and your marry band of ops people. Not one of your finer moments.
Apple iPhone purchasers should have seen this coming, it's takes a good 15 - 20 minutes to activate a regular phone on a regular day let alone a long awaited purchase like an iPhone. It wouldn't have killed people to back off and wait an extra day or two for something you've been waiting for over a year.
Most stores ran out of the 16 GB after the first 100 people in line. I was, natural;ly one of the first to be denied. Guess it might turn out for the better to have to wait. Mine will be shipped in the next few days, so I'm told.
I have never understood this whole Apple hysteria. Years ago, I bought myself a portable MP3 player. I could afford the iPod, but I chose another brand simply because it was way superior in audio quality, had an integrated FM-radio, in/output (including optical) for audio recording, and built-in mike. The iPod had none of those features, and for some strange reason, which I will call "brainwashing", people preferred to buy the iPod. I guess that it was mainly because of the looks and nothing else. Now, the same hysteria is happening with the iPhone. People have been brainwashed again believing that they are getting a magic product. It is unbeliavable how people can be so ignorant!
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1 Posted by klnangle on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:52PM EDT Report Abuse
Apparently it's not just a matter of waiting, for those upgrading existing iPhones - many reports of phones left in an unusable state. I understand overloaded servers, but don't understand how Apple allows that fact to make a working phone useless. I'll wait till next week.