Crowds line up for latest iPhone

Apple reports ‘off-the-chart’ demand for device’s 4th version

 An Apple employee shows Duane Davis (left) the new features of his Apple iPhone 4 on Thursday at the Memorial City Mall Apple Store in Houston during the first day of sales.
An Apple employee shows Duane Davis (left) the new features of his Apple iPhone 4 on Thursday at the Memorial City Mall Apple Store in Houston during the first day of sales.

— Apple Inc.’s newest iPhone was selling briskly Thursday as thousands lined up outside stores around the world.

Some stores including ones in Tokyo and Miami sold out within hours as the iPhone 4 went on sale in theU.S., France, Germany, the U.K. and Japan. Apple called the demand for the phone “off the charts” and said it’s working to get phones into customers’ hands as quickly as possible.

Sean Hill, 39, a Washington police officer who ordered an iPhone before release, smiled and held it up for the crowd to see as he left the newly opened Apple store in the Georgetown neighborhood.

“I’m like a kid in a candy store,” Hill said. “I’m probably going to spend all morning playing with it.”

More than 600,000 people had rushed to order iPhones for the first day they were available, prompting Apple and its exclusive wireless partner in the U.S., AT&T Inc., to stop taking orders for pickup or shipment by Thursday’s launch. On Apple’s website, new orders weren’t promised for delivery until July 14.

Those who didn’t place an iPhone 4 order had to line up outside Apple stores Thursday in the hopes of buying one on a first-come, first-served basis.

“They have been advertising and hyping for months,” administrative assistant Jasmine Cordova, 25, said outside New York’s Fifth Avenue store. “They should make sure to stock enough.”

In Aventura, Fla., Loren and Veronica McHenry held out hope after miscommunications landed them at the back of the line. They had arrived at 9 p.m. Wednesday and were told no one was allowed on mall property overnight. They returned only to learn that 120people had camped out at a nearby parking lot.

“There’s no coordination between the mall employees, security and law enforcement,” said Loren McHenry, 42, shaking his head in disbelief. “It’s a mess.”

After employees at the Apple Store started yelling that the fire marshal was going to shut the store down unless people moved back, the couple got shoved behind a large group of people who refused to budge from their spots. In front of them, McHenry said, two men threatened to fight each other rather than move.

From Cherry Hill, N.J., to San Francisco, Apple employees continued the tradition of providing bottled water, coffee, bagels and even cupcakes. In downtown Chicago, several customers waited overnight through severe thunderstorms and even defied tornado sirens that wailed around the city. To keep the die-hard iPhone fans dry, the store handed out black umbrellas with white Apple logos.

Depending on the amount of storage, the iPhone 4 sells for $199 or $299 with a two year contract.

The new iPhone, the fourth since the 2007 original, is thinner with a better-resolution screen and longer battery life. It features a new operating system that can also be installed on some older models, such as the 3GS, along with cameras on both sides to permit faceto-face video calls.

But Julia Glanternik, 28, a medical student in New York, wasn’t buying the iPhone 4 for its new features.

“I have the 3GS,” she said, “but my friend dropped it in a pitcher of beer last week.”

Business, Pages 27 on 06/25/2010

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