
New Yorkers on Monday wait in line for the iPhone 5, which goes on sale Friday.
You'll probably need to wait in line. Or pay someone to do it for you.
Hipster-looking shoppers already have plopped down in folding chairs outside Apple's flagship store on Fifth Avenue in New York.
And in San Francisco, a
man working through a micro-tasking company (more on what that means in a
second) has been diligently waiting in line, for a price, since Monday.
"You're going to wait
here until Friday? God watch over you," a stranger told that person, who
was using a service called TaskRabbit, according to his Twitter feed.
TaskRabbit nabbed the
first-in-line spot to try to promote its online service that allows
people to pay someone else to do a menial task for them. In this case, according to CNET, you can find people online who for about $40 to $150 will stand in line to purchase the iPhone 5 on your behalf.
That sort of idea isn't
all that new, and line-standers also are offering their services on
craigslist. "If you are looking to buy the iPhone 5 when it is released,
but not looking to stand in the line. I'll do it for you!" wrote one
person in Los Angeles. "I'll get in line at 6 a.m. for 40 bucks. Camp
overnight for 70," wrote another stander, this one from the San
Francisco Bay Area.
Other people are posting
craigslist ads asking others to stand in line for them. One such ad, in
Los Angeles, says the patron will offer the stander "a reasonable
amount" ... "and on top of that, I'll even buy you breakfast."
For those who don't want
to spend even more than the hefty price tag for the iPhone, but do want
to pick up a phone on Friday, perhaps the line is the way to go.
Unless you hopped online within the first hour or so last Friday, pre-ordered iPhones aren't expected to arrive for weeks.
But plan to get up early on Friday morning.
While opening-day iPhone
lines vary by location -- what passes as early enough at a Radio Shack
in Boise may not work for the Apple store in Brooklyn -- analysts generally say advance consumer demand for the iPhone 5 is outpacing previous models. Early reviews of the phone have been positive.
Apple recently announced it had received 2 million pre-orders
for the new phone, which is taller, faster, lighter and slimmer than
the previous model, the iPhone 4S. That's about double what the company
experienced for the previous iPhone, Apple said.
That could foreshadow
long lines. Or it could mean more consumers are skipping the
line-waiting game and, instead, have chosen to order the phone online.
The line waits are part exercise in extreme consumerism, part homage to Apple.
Last year some of the
line-standers made pilgrimages to Apple stores in part out of a sense of
tribute to Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, who died a week before the
phone went on sale. Fans set up mini-memorials in his honor at some
Apple stores.
To get a sense of what the most dedicated Apple fans are willing to go through, check out this chart from The Atlantic, which shows the longest Apple gadget waits.
If you're just in the
market for purchasing the new iPhone, not the in-line circus, there are
several other stores that plan to carry the iPhone 5 on Friday.
They include AT&T,
Sprint and Verizon stores, as well as select Best Buy, RadioShack,
Target and Walmart locations. Check with stores in your area for
details.
Still want to brave the
Apple store? Doors open at 8 a.m. local time Friday in the U.S.,
Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and the
UK. The iPhone 5 will roll out to 22 more countries on September 28.
0 comments:
Post a Comment