Tag Archives: launch

Google rumored to launch 32GB Nexus 4 with LTE at I/O

Google rumored to launch 32GB Nexus 4 with LTE at I/O

Two of the chief complaints regarding the LG Nexus 4 is the fact that the largest amount of storage on the Nexus 4 is fixed at 16GB and that it lacks LTE connectivity.  According to a recent rumor, Google I/O may very well see the introduction of a slightly refreshed Nexus 4 smartphone.

By a slight refresh, we mean more onboard storage such as 32GB, and the presence of LTE connectivity.  With that being said, we do not anticipate seeing an upgrade to battery life or screen resolution.  However, the upgrade in storage and faster network speeds should be well-received by prospective Nexus 4 customers.

There is a strong chance that Google may drop the Nexus 4 8GB model if the rumor pans out.  If Google opts to drop the 8GB model, then I would imagine the 16GB would be sold at the base price of $299 and the 32GB LTE model would take command of the $349 price tag.  While some Android fans may be peeved at Google for not launching the X Phone, I believe a 32GB Nexus 4 with LTE makes a lot of sense given the recent development of T-Mobile’s LTE network.

[Phandroid]

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Sprint and AT&T announce pre-order availability for HTC One for $199 on contract

Sprint and AT&T announce pre-order availability for HTC One for $199 on contract

Earlier today, Sprint and AT&T each made announcements regarding pre-order availability of the HTC One.  Some common information mentioned between the two carriers is the same, such as final availability and pricing.  Specifically, the HTC One will launch on April 19th for $199 on a two year contract on both Sprint and AT&T.

Now, the initial pre-order date is where the two carriers differ.  On April 4th, AT&T will open pre-orders for the HTC One for $199 on a two year contract.  On April 5th, Sprint will begin HTC One pre-orders for $199 on contract as well.  It is interesting that AT&T decided to begin one day earlier, but such is life when carriers are trying to compete with one another on every level possible.

If you are interested in the HTC One, I would recommend placing a pre-order so you can guarantee a device when it becomes available on April 19th.

[Sprint] [AT&T]

Related StoriesRadioShack will reportedly sell the HTC One for $199 and offer $50 in Google Play creditAT&T: Pre-order your Galaxy S 4 starting April 16 for $249AT&T’s 16GB Galaxy S 4 will cost $199 on contract, while the 32GB model will cost $249

Google launches Keep in the Play Store, offers Drive compatibility

Google launches Keep in the Play Store, offers Drive compatibility

When you think of virtual note taking, Evernote likely comes to mind.  The service a neat way to take notes on a smartphone and have it sync with your laptop or other devices.  While many people use Evernote and enjoy it, Google is ready to enter the realm of note-taking.  Even though I haven’t used Google Keep extensively yet, I imagine it is definitely worth a shot since it is a Google product.

There is one main caveat associated with the app, which I will get to in a moment.  However, let’s first discuss what makes the app unique and practical.  Some of the main features include creating checklists, creating voice notes, and embedding photos in notes.  A home screen Keep widget can help organize your notes and show what’s most important right on your home screen.  In addition, Google allows for color coding making it very similar to virtual Post-it notes.

The interesting feature about Google Keep is the fact that it is deeply integrated with Drive.  As a result, any notes created on your smartphone can be easily accessed on your tablet or home computer.  Lastly, Keep can be accessed and edited on the web if you don’t own an Android device running 4.0.3 or higher.

Here is the main caveat, Google Keep only runs on Android devices running Android 4.0.3 or higher, which alienates a sizable portion of Android users.  If your Android smartphone or tablet runs ICS or higher, then you are in luck and can install Google Keep right away.

The question that immediately comes to mind is whether Google Keep can dethrone Evernote.  I am not so sure, but it’s great to see Google offer Evernote some competition.

Below is a YouTube video explaining the service in a little more detail and provides a real-life example.

[Google Android Blog]

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HTC faces component shortage as it struggles to manufacture enough One devices

HTC faces component shortage as it struggles to manufacture enough One devices

The HTC One is a prime position to contend with the Samsung Galaxy S 4 and iPhone 5 based on intial reviews.  However, there is one major obstacle holding HTC back from even launching the One on time — component shortages.

According to a report from the WSJ, HTC is having trouble procuring enough rear facing cameras as well as metal casings.  As a result, the production lines aren’t churning out as many HTC One devices as they could.  After having less than stellar performances in the past few quarters with its other devices, HTC had to seriously revise its demand forecasts.  Some of HTC’s suppliers have downgraded HTC’s status from a tier-one customer.

Being able to efficiently manage a supply chain is a necessary factor in achieving success, and it appears HTC is having trouble accurately communicating needs with its suppliers.

The launch time frame has been pushed back from March to early April in many markets.  HTC planned to get the One on store shevles well ahead of the Galaxy S 4, but now that goal seems impossible.

To make the story into even more of a saga, let’s toss in some drama.  The WSJ is also reporting that HTC’s CEO, Peter Chou, will step down if the One is not successful.  We’re not exactly sure how what specific measures HTC will employ to decide whether the One is a success or not, but so far it is not starting out well.  It will be interesting to see if HTC opts to release any official statements, but perhaps they should reconsider disparaging the Samsung Galaxy S 4 when they have clear problems of their own.

[The Verge]

Verizon Wireless will reportedly launch the HTC One after other carriers

Verizon Wireless will reportedly launch the HTC One after other carriers

When HTC initially announced the One, its true flagship Android smartphone for 2013, it promised a global roll-out across many carriers.  In the United States, HTC will launch it on three national carriers — AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile.  The largest wireless provider is noticeably missing from the list of partner carriers.  However, that is rumored to change.

According to an exclusive report by All Things D, Verizon Wireless and HTC reached an agreement to sell the HTC One later this year.  In terms of a specific time frame, the report mentions that it will launch a month or two after the three other American carriers begin selling the One.  The original consensus on why Big Red passed on the One was because it is still selling the DROID DNA, but now it appears Verizon is ready to offer two HTC flagship devices.  With the One in Verizon’s portfolio, I imagine the DROID DNA will receive a price cut.

As of now, we are still waiting for an official announcement from either HTC or Verizon Wireless on the matter.  For our Verizon fans out there, hopefully this report turns out to be true since the One is a tremendous phone that could sure appeal to many Verizon customers.

[All Things D]

Related StoriesHTC rumored to launch social media focused HTC Myst in the SpringSamsung will reportedly launch a Galaxy Note with a 5.9 inch display in 2013NYT report indicates Galaxy S 4 will offer an eye-scrolling capability

HTC One Delayed Ahead Of Samsung’s Galaxy S4 Launch

HTC has admitted its latest flagship smartphone will be delayed in UK amid supply issues.

The HTC One was well received after its announcement last month, with tech sites praising its high quality metal construction, excellent screen and risky 4MP ‘Ultrapixel’ camera.

But while the struggling Taiwanese manufacturer had planned to release the phone on Friday, it now says it will not reach most stores until late March or early April.

That could prove critical with the imminent announcement by Samsung of its own new flagship device, the Galaxy S4, on Thursday.

Customers due an upgrade will now have the opportunity to assess the Samsung GS4 and the HTC One side-by-side when they make their purchasing decision.

HTC said in a statement:

“We will start fulfilling pre-orders by the end of March in certain markets and will roll out product to more markets as we approach April.”

Reviews of the HTC One have been hitting the web this week, with most in general praising the device’s industrial design and HTC sense software based on Android 4.2.

But as ever with Android phones the market moves quickly, and all eyes are now on Samsung to deliver a market-leading device as it did in 2012 with the Galaxy S3.

SwiftKey 4 lands in the Play Store, offers SwiftKey Flow in tow

SwiftKey 4 lands in the Play Store, offers SwiftKey Flow in tow

For a while now, SwiftKey had been testing SwiftKey Flow in beta for several months.  However, the Flow feature is now neatly baked into SwiftKey as the popular third party keyboard app has been officially updated in the Play Store.  Even though it is technically known as SwiftKey 4, it will remain in the Play Store as SwiftKey.

The Flow aspect is similar to what we are familiar with in Swype, but it represents SwiftKey’s take on swiping as a method of text input.  Users can switch easily between Flow and the normal tap method of text input.  Another cool new feature found in the latest version of SwiftKey is Flow Through Space.  Essentially, this mode of text input allows you to input entire sentences without ever having to lift a finger.

Other new features are as follows:

SwiftKey Flow – blending SwiftKey’s mind-reading next-word prediction and autocorrect with the speed of gesture typing
Flow Through Space – lets users write entire sentences in one motion without ever having to lift their finger to add a space
Support for contextual prediction across 60 languages – with new support for Albanian, Bosnian, Javanese, Sundanese, Thai and Vietnamese, all with dynamic auto-correction and next word prediction
Easier corrections – tap on a word and SwiftKey 4 will move the cursor to the end of the word and offer two alternatives
Personalized typing style – whether you write inaccurately with two thumbs or more carefully using a single finger, SwiftKey 4 now automatically adapts to how users type to provide more insightful corrections and prediction

As a limited time promotion, SwiftKey is offering its latest Android app for $1.99 in the Google Play Store.  Typically, the keyboard sells for $3.99, but SwiftKey wants to entice new users to give the updated keyboard a chance.  Current owners of SwiftKey will receive a free update to SwiftKey 4.

[Google Play Store]

Apple Reports Staggering iPhone 5 Sales

NEW YORK (AP) — Apple Inc. said Monday that it sold more than 5 million units of the iPhone 5 in the three days since its launch, less than analysts had expected.

Apple shares were down $6.60, or 0.9 percent, at $693.49 in morning trading. The shares are still close to their all-time high of $705.07, hit Friday as the phone went on sale in the U.S., Germany, France, Japan and five other countries.

The sales tally is a record for any phone, but it beats last year’s iPhone 4S launch only by a small margin. Apple said then that it sold 4 million phones in the first three days.

Topeka Capital Markets analyst Brian White expected Apple to sell 6 million to 6.5 million iPhone 5s in the first three days. He said the shortfall was largely due to limited supply. White said the phone was sold out at 80 to 85 percent of the U.S. Apple stores he and his team contacted Sunday evening, and the ones that were still available were mostly Sprint models.

Online delivery times have stretched to three to four weeks.

The phone will go on sale in 22 more countries on Friday and in more than 100 countries by the end of the year.

Apple Reports Staggering iPhone 5 Sales

NEW YORK (AP) — Apple Inc. said Monday that it sold more than 5 million units of the iPhone 5 in the three days since its launch, less than analysts had expected.

Apple shares were down $6.60, or 0.9 percent, at $693.49 in morning trading. The shares are still close to their all-time high of $705.07, hit Friday as the phone went on sale in the U.S., Germany, France, Japan and five other countries.

The sales tally is a record for any phone, but it beats last year’s iPhone 4S launch only by a small margin. Apple said then that it sold 4 million phones in the first three days.

Topeka Capital Markets analyst Brian White expected Apple to sell 6 million to 6.5 million iPhone 5s in the first three days. He said the shortfall was largely due to limited supply. White said the phone was sold out at 80 to 85 percent of the U.S. Apple stores he and his team contacted Sunday evening, and the ones that were still available were mostly Sprint models.

Online delivery times have stretched to three to four weeks.

The phone will go on sale in 22 more countries on Friday and in more than 100 countries by the end of the year.

The Thing Tim Cook’s Best At? (It’s Not What You Can See)

By Peter Henderson and Poornima Gupta

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Tim Cook is no Steve Jobs when it comes to leading Apple Inc. As the debut of the new iPhone 5 just proved, that may not be a bad thing.

The taller, thinner and lighter phone prompted a rush on Wall Street to raise price targets for Apple stock, but the optimism was not because of a big technological advance or design breakthrough; the “wow” factor that was the trademark of the late Apple co-founder Jobs was decidedly absent.

Rather, it was the speed of the global launch that astounded, validating the new CEO’s much-touted wizardry at the essential but unglamorous task of managing a supply chain.

“We are positively surprised regarding the pace of the rollout, since we had expected a bigger impact from component constraints,” Barclays analyst Ben Reitzes said.

By next Friday, the iPhone 5 will be in 31 countries, and will be in 100 by the end of the calendar year. That would be 30 more than the rollout of the predecessor phone, the 4S, over a similar period, Jeffries analyst Peter Misek calculated.

That means Apple has worked out supply constraints and inked deals now with 240 carriers. It will get enough phones out the door in the next 10 days to have a material effect on earnings.

“His skills fit the time period and the flow of product,” said Raymond Miles, professor emeritus at Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley, adding that Apple may be at a stage where it needs “someone with a production vision.”

The iPhone launch offers some other, subtler indications of how Apple is changing under Cook. In public events, Jobs stood out in his black turtleneck, and performed carefully crafted one-man stage shows. At the press event for the iPhone 5, Cook blended into a pack of executives all sporting a uniform of jeans and untucked casual dress shirt.

Indeed, one might say that practical, low-flash, but high-impact actions are emerging as the Cook trademark. He has introduced a dividend to pay out part of the more than $100 billion cash stockpile, raised salaries for a rabidly loyal but low-paid workforce in the Apple stories, and sped up product rollouts.

Under Cook, more Wall Street analysts have been invited to headquarters to talk to executives, particularly Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer and head of Internet services Eddy Cue. Cook himself addressed investors at a Goldman Sachs conference, a rarity for Apple executives, and initiated investigations into allegations of labor abuse in its supply chain.

APPLE MAPS PROBLEMS

Insiders say he is a refreshing presence after the prickly Jobs, who was admired but feared. Cook is also known for his ability to track vast amount of data and zero in on a critical parameter.

One person familiar with the CEO notes that under Cook, the company has continued to rapidly increase its revenue, retain all the senior executives, maintain its product rollout schedule and avoid huge blunders.

On the flip side, the imbroglio over the sub-par mapping software in the iPhone 5 suggests that Jobs’ obsessive perfectionism and attention to user experience is already being missed.

Apple Maps, which offers soaring ‘flyover’ views of major cities, has displaced Google Maps on the new iPhone software. But the new program has no public transit directions, limited traffic information, and flat-out mistakes, such as putting one city in the middle of the ocean.

“Apple made this maps change despite its shortcomings because they put their own priorities for corporate strategy ahead of user experience,” said Anil Dash, a widely followed technology pundit, reflecting widespread annoyance and consternation.

Jobs would have put the whole company to work on the problem, as each negative review of the widely used feature would have irked him, said the person familiar with Apple’s inner workings. The issue facing Cook now is how fast he reacts to the Maps problem and how quickly it gets fixed, the person said.

Jobs himself allowed email synchronization software MobileMe to launch in 2008, to deadly reviews. Fortune magazine reported Jobs telling the entire development group, “You should hate each other for having let each other down” and immediately replaced the group’s head.

“No CEO, not even Steve Jobs, would be able to catch all the problems in every new feature of a new complicated product, like the iPhone 5,” said Harvard Business School professor David Yoffie. “The big question is how will Tim respond now?”

More broadly, there is also the question of whether Apple under Cook can produce products that are revolutionary rather than evolutionary. His products thus far – the iPhone, the new iPod line and an expected iPad mini – represent improvements, rather than game changers.

In the meantime, Cook is topping Jobs’ sales record: IPhone 5 preorders hit 2 million in 24 hours, twice the level of the 4S, and analysts expect a smaller iPad mini in October.

Investors do not seem to need much more convincing about Cook’s ability to captain the ship: the average price target for Apple stock is now $763, up 6 percent from a month ago, thanks to analysts raising targets in the wake of the “wow-less” launch event.

(Editing by Jonathan Weber and Mary Milliken)

LOOK: Samsung Bashes iPhone 5

Samsung and Apple stopped playing nice a long time ago.

Since the launch of the iPhone 5 last week, Samsung has rolled out a new print ad mocking Apple products, employees and customers — all while touting the offerings of Samsung’s flagship Galaxy S3 handset.

The ad, which ran in select newspapers over the weekend, lists some of the iPhone 5′s most talked-about features: the 4-inch screen, 4G LTE connectivity, screen resolution, battery life and more. Next to these are listed the Galaxy S3′s features: taller screen, 4G LTE connectivity, higher screen resolution, longer battery life, etc. Featured prominently at the top of the ad is the tagline “It doesn’t take a genius,” as much a dig at Apple Store employees as it is at the throngs of fanboys already reserving the new iPhone 5 in record numbers.

The ad also lists a handful of additional Galaxy S3 features that you won’t find on the iPhone 5 (NFC capabilities and picture-in-picture viewing, among those); however, it mentions nothing about camera quality, which is one notable area that the new iPhone has the Galaxy S3 whipped.

LOOK: [via Gizmodo]
it doesnt take a genius samsung

Apple enthusiasts have been quick to respond to Samsung’s perceived “bullying.” Check out the fan-made rebuttal (below), which accuses Samsung of “copying the future” in a not-so-subtle reference to a California jury’s recent order that Samsung pay Apple $1 billion for infringing on mobile patents.

LOOK: [via CNET]
it doesnt take a genius samsung

We’ve also spotted another rebuttal version mocking the Galaxy S3′s supposedly cheap construction and listing several iPhone features not found on Samsung’s device.

LOOK: [via HuffPost Tech U.K.]

it doesnt take a genius

While we doubt Apple will respond to Samsung’s latest attack ad, we’d wager that this isn’t the last of Samsung’s mud slinging. The company has released several high-profile ads slamming the iPhone and Apple customers. Here’s one for the Samsung Galaxy Note that ran during the 2012 year’s Super Bowl, not long after the release of the iPhone 4S.

WATCH:

Want a more unbiased look at how these phones really stack up to one another? Take a look at our chart comparing the specs of the iPhone 5 to those of the Galaxy S3, the Lumia 920 and the iPhone 4S. Then, have a look through our gallery featuring the 9 things that have changed more than the iPhone.

Motorola RAZR HD announced for Germany, launches in October

Motorola RAZR HD announced for Germany, launches in October

A few days ago, Motorola announced that its latest RAZR HD smartphone will launch in Germany sometime in October.  For German citizens, this is significant because another great Android smartphone is headed your way.  For American consumers, this is potentially significant because the DROID RAZR HD and DROID RAZR MAXX HD could launch in October as well.  It would be surprising to see Motorola’s flagship device launch in Germany before America, especially considering it was announced here first.

At the very least, the DROID RAZR HD/DROID RAZR MAXX HD should launch in Germany and the United States at the same time, which would be October.  During the American unveiling, Motorola reaffirmed it would launch before the Holidays, so October sounds like a solid target date.

As always, we will have to wait until official confirmation from Motorola or Verizon, but hopefully October will see the launch of the DROID RAZR HD and RAZR MAXX HD.

[Motorola] [Droid-Life]

Angry Apple Fans Respond To Samsung’s ‘It Doesn’t Take A Genius’ Ad

Samsung has responded to last week’s launch of the iPhone 5 with a tongue-in-cheek promoting its own flagship phone.

Jabbing Apple fans with the tagline ‘It doesn’t take a genius’, the ad points out a number of differences between the new iPhone and the Korean company’s own Galaxy SIII.

It then goes on to list virtually every feature of its own device.

It notes that the SIII has a larger screen, more Ram and “a standard micro USB plug” versus “a totally different plug”.

But Apple’s fanbase has already responded to the ad, creating its own versions which pull exactly the same trick on Samsung.

One ad uses the tagline ‘don’t settle for cheap plastic’, and references to its 700,000 available apps, its Airplay music and video streaming feature and iMessage.

Others take issue with several of Samsung’s claims about screen quality and app selection.

Neither advert is particularly edifying, but they are both posted in full below.

samsungad

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Angry Apple Fans Respond To Samsung’s ‘It Doesn’t Take A Genius’ Ad

Samsung has responded to last week’s launch of the iPhone 5 with a tongue-in-cheek promoting its own flagship phone.

Jabbing Apple fans with the tagline ‘It doesn’t take a genius’, the ad points out a number of differences between the new iPhone and the Korean company’s own Galaxy SIII.

It then goes on to list virtually every feature of its own device.

It notes that the SIII has a larger screen, more Ram and “a standard micro USB plug” versus “a totally different plug”.

But Apple’s fanbase has already responded to the ad, creating its own versions which pull exactly the same trick on Samsung.

One ad uses the tagline ‘don’t settle for cheap plastic’, and references to its 700,000 available apps, its Airplay music and video streaming feature and iMessage.

Others take issue with several of Samsung’s claims about screen quality and app selection.

Neither advert is particularly edifying, but they are both posted in full below.

samsungad

a278zjceaayeos

Samsung Galaxy Note II rumored to launch October 21 on AT&T

Samsung Galaxy Note II rumored to launch October 21 on AT&T

The Samsung Galaxy Note II is the next highly anticipated phablet coming from Samsung.  We saw the event go down in the end of August, and while American launch carriers have not been announced, it’s safe to say more than one will launch the iconic GNote II.

According to a recent rumor, AT&T is expected to launch its own model of the Samsung Galaxy Note II on October 21 for an unknown price point.  This piece of intel lines up with previous confirmed information stating the device would launch in October.  BGR’s source is labeled as “trusted,” but we do not know how the source received this information.  Unfortunately, pricing for the Galaxy Note II is not yet available.

I imagine we will hear of more details surrounding the AT&T Galaxy Note II and other carriers’ models as well.

[BGR]

U.S. Launches Classified National Defense Satellite

VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, California (AP) — An Atlas 5 rocket carrying a classified satellite for the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office has lifted off from Vandenberg Air Force Base on the central California coast.

The launch vehicle’s main engine ignited Thursday afternoon for a mission described only as being in support of national defense.

It’s the fourth launch this year for the NRO, which operates the U.S. system of intelligence-gathering satellites. The launch was delayed six weeks due to launch range equipment problems.

The Atlas is also carrying 11 tiny satellites known as Cubesats to conduct research on subjects ranging from space weather to tracking maritime shipping containers.

The Cubesats include projects from four universities.

Opponents Steal Puerto Rican Governor’s Website

Politicians be forewarned! Remember to renew your website’s domain name on time, otherwise you may fall victim to URL thieves.

Puerto Rican Governor Luis Fortuño is learning that lesson this week after his website, LuisFortuno.com, expired and his opponents, the Popular Democratic Party (PPD), swooped in and snatched up the name.

As Latino Rebels reports, the Republican incumbent used LuisFortuno.com for his 2008 gubernatorial campaign, however the website appears to have changed hands this week and is now sponsored by the PPD (as seen at the bottom of the site). The home page, which features a photo of Fortuno with arms crossed above the message “Hazme Tus Preguntas” or “Ask Me Your Questions,” opens with an incendiary video that slams Fortuno.

luis fortuno website

PPD, also known as the Populares, added insult to Fortuno’s injury, posting a photo of the receipt for the purchased domain name on the party’s official Twitter account. The cost? $12.17 for the domain name and $6.99 for private registration services — even though the PPD is certainly not holding anything back in its claims of ownership.

Former Puerto Rican governor Anibal Acevedo Vila, a member of PPD, responded to the party’s takeover of LuisFortuno.com in a tweet, writing: “Not renewing luisfortuno.com, when LF used it in his campaigns in 04-08 is the best example of incompetence. Failed campaign and government!”

No re-comprar luisfortuno.com, cuando LF lo uso en sus campañas 04-08 es mayor muestra de incompetencia. Campaña y gobierno colapsados!

— anibalacevedo (@anibalacevedo) September 11, 2012

While it appears Fortuño allowed the domain name to expire, trading in LuisFortuno.com for PorPuertoRico2012.com, the domain name may have changed hands as early as October 2011, according to data from GoDaddy.com.

Why Fortuno’s opponents chose to wait until this time to announce their take over is anyone’s guess, but the Sept. 10 launch — on the eve of Fortuno’s first debate — was likely a strategic move.

Watch the main video below and click over to the website to see the other videos the PPD posted.

(h/t Latino Rebels)

How To Buy An iPhone 5

So you’ve read the live blogs, seen the pictures, considered the new dock connector and lusted after the new screen…

But how do you actually buy an iPhone 5?

Luckily for us, we won’t have to wait too long here in the UK. The phone goes up for pre-order from Apple on Friday 14 September and officially goes on sale a week later on 21 September.

Simple? Er… No. Here’s the lowdown.

1. BUYING OUTRIGHT

If you just want to own an iPhone 5, and don’t care about getting a new contract or money off the phone from your network, then you’re in luck. Come Friday you’ll be able to log on to Apple.com and buy a new phone for £529 (16GB), £599 (32GB) and £699 (64GB), and have it delivered a week later (stock depending).

However… when you buy the phone, you’ll have the choice to add a pay-as-you-go Sim Card to it – which even if you want to run it on your existing network deal, you might want to do.

Why? Because of the SIM…

2: THE NANO SIM

Apple’s new iPhone uses a smaller SIM card, called a Nano Sim. And to get it to work, you’re going to need one to pop in the phone.

Unfortunately, even if you have an existing iPhone you won’t have a Nano Sim – so to use the iPhone 5 you’re going to have to replace it.

If you pop into your network’s retail store you should be able to swap your SIM for a Nano Sim, but availability and processes vary. Plus if your Network doesn’t have its own stores, you might have to ring up or order one online. Just be aware of doing so before next Friday – else you won’t have a SIM card for your lovely new phone.

3. CONTRACT

Most of the major networks will be offering the iPhone 5 at launch, but as of right now few have announced prices.

Here’s what we know so far:

Orange/T-Mobile: register your interest here
O2: will offer the iPhone at launch, and give you up to £295 for your old iPhone 4S (64GB)
Three: no details
Tesco Mobile: no details
Vodafone: register here

4: 4G?

The new iPhone 5 comes with 4G LTE built in – which provides up to five times faster browsing speeds that the current iPhone 4S. But unfortunately, 4G is currently only offered by one UK network – the recently announced EE – and they haven’t launched yet.

As such, if you want to buy an iPhone 5 with 4G, you’ll have to first sign up to Orange or T-Mobile and then switch to EE once they launch in a few weeks’ time. Complicated? Yes. Yes it is.

And if you’re hoping that O2, Vodafone and other neworks will switch on 4G soon – you might be out of luck there too. The auction for new spectrum on which to run 4G hasn’t happened yet, and even when it does it looks like the iPhone 5 will have to be updated to work on the new spectrum.

According to the tech blogs, Three’s LTE network should be up sooner than that – but without any announcement we can’t guarantee it.

iPhone 5 Price, Release Date Announced

Apple has finally unveiled the iPhone 5, and the new iPhone’s hardware looks a whole lot like the old iPhone’s hardware.

Turns out their pricetags are similar, too.

Just like the iPhone 4S when it first launched, the iPhone 5 will cost $199 for a 16GB version of the phone, $299 for a 32GB version and $399 for a 64GB version. Those prices all apply to users purchasing phones together with a two-year contract with one of the iPhone’s three U.S. carriers (AT&T, Sprint and Verizon).

The phone will go on sale in nine countries — the U.S., U.K, Canada, France, Germany, Australia, Japan, Hong Kong and Singapore — on September 21 (precisely the day Apple blogs had predicted the phone would hit shelves).

Apple will begin accepting pre-orders for the new iPhone on September 14 and has already set up a landing page for the device on its online store.

As usual, the launch of a new iPhone is going hand-in-hand with a discount in the price of an old one. Apple is knocking $100 off the price of the 16GB iPhone 4S, which will retail for $99 rather than $199, with a two-year contract. The 16GB iPhone 4 will be given away for free when customers sign contracts with mobile carriers.

For more on what Apple just announced, check out our full coverage of Apple’s iPhone event right here.

Apple iPhone 5: Search Data Shows Massive Excitement Ahead Of Launch

How much do people want the iPhone 5?

Judging by the success of competing handsets, the Apple Backlash and general cynicism about new phones, you might expect it the anticipation to be less than last time around.

You would be wrong.

According to search data gathered by Experian Hitwise, there have been 19 times more searches for the ‘iPhone 5′ than ‘iPhone 4S’ this week alone.

Overall about 1 in 1000 searches on the internet were for iPhone 5 last week.

Meanwhile 25% of searches relating to the iPhone were about the iPhone 5, and week-on-week there has been a 42% increase in searches for ‘iPhone 5′.

So, yeah – people care. Over to you, Apple.

READ MORE: Apple iPhone 5 Event Preview