THE TECHNOLOGIST

Steven Levy

 
GALLERY
Apple's Seeds of Innovation

Apple has never been a stranger to temptation. As they get consumers buzzing over the newest Mac gadget, a look back at ten landmark moments in Apple history:

 

Dialing Into the Future

After its new 3G iPhone, what's next for Apple?

 
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Member Comments
  • Posted By: King Evil Theo @ 06/22/2008 9:39:53 AM

    Comment: That sounds like a good deal to me, Prairie Prankster. When you buy anything and pay for it over time, you expect to pay more over the long run; don't you? Or maybe you buy your cars and houses outright. Why shouldn't AT&T be a winner in this deal? they are in business to make money. This looks like a win-win-win for everyone; Apple-AT&T-Consumer. Isn't that the way a flat earth senerio should work?

  • Posted By: King Evil Theo @ 06/22/2008 9:39:28 AM

    Comment: That sounds like a good deal to me, Prairie Prankster. When you buy anything and pay for it over time, you expect to pay more over the long run; don't you? Or maybe you buy your cars and houses outright. Why shouldn't AT&T be a winner in this deal? they are in business to make money. This looks like a win-win-win for everyone; Apple-AT&T-Consumer. Isn't that the way a flat earth senerio should work?

  • Posted By: ThePrairiePrankster @ 06/11/2008 6:11:26 PM

    Comment: When you combine the extra $10/month for unlimited data along with the new charge of $10/month for 200 text messages, the "new" iPhone and AT&T service will cost at least $20 more per month and over the life a 2 year contract that equals $480. So this new device, as cool as it is, will cost $199 + $480 for the same levels of service from AT&T, or $679 which is what many paid for the original iPhone albeit with it's slower data transfer rates. Sounds like a great deal for AT&T.

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