The most highly anticipated consumer electronics device in history has
finally found its way into the hands of an anxious public.
Apple began
selling the iPhone on 29 June through its own retail channel, and at stores for
the device's operator,
AT&
T/Cingular.
The first iPhones were sold on the east coast, where customers who had been
waiting in line for as many as four days were finally able to purchase the
devices.
Other Apple and AT&T stores across the country opened their doors at 6pm
local time.
At the downtown San Francisco Apple Store, the opening capped a
long and anxious wait for hundreds of consumers who had
been standing in line for as long as 33 hours.
Apple closed down the store at 2pm and placed large black curtains over the
windows while staff prepared the various iPhone displays.
By 5.30pm, members of the press and curious onlookers began to gather in
front of the store, joining the hundreds of prospective buyers.
The anticipation continued to mount until 6.00pm, when the first customers
were let into the store by cheering Apple employees.
Jerry Taylor, who
had
been waiting on a San Francisco sidewalk since Thursday morning, was the
first to emerge, triumphantly holding the unopened box amidst a crowd of
television camera crews and photographers.
Taylor was soon followed by other customers carrying their iPhones in black
bags nicknamed "tote bags of glory" by one journalist.
Inside the store, jubilant customers lined up to purchase the $499 and $599
iPhone models.
Customer Andrew Velis described the feeling of finally getting an iPhone as
simply "awesome".
"Everyone was cheering, it was mayhem," Velis said of his entry into the
store.
Vellis, who began waiting at 6pm on Thursday, plans on taking a nap when he
gets home. "Then I'm going to play with my new toy," he said.
The overnight wait proved to be largely unnecessary for many customers. Brian
Porea waited only four hours before getting into the store to purchase an
iPhone.
His first call will be to a friend in Atlanta who himself called Porea three
hours earlier from his new iPhone.
Many of those who did endure the long wait, however, had no regrets.
Tyler Martin, an online entrepreneur who was visiting San Francisco from
Canada, joined the iPhone queue at 11pm on Thursday.
"It's not necessarily the product that was worth it," Martin explained. "But
for me to come to America and experience this whole event has been worth it."
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