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The Cupertino-based company confirmed that the iPhone is out of stock online, but added that brick-and-mortar stores run by Apple and iPhone carriers including AT&T Inc. might still have units available. Apple has been known for clearing out its inventory of a certain product ahead of a major upgrade.
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Apple spokeswoman Natalie Kerris declined to comment on reasons for the shortage and on Apples plans for an update to the device, which is widely expected to be unveiled in June at Apples Worldwide Developers Conference in
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The paucity of iPhones for sale in some markets comes as Apple is hustling to meet its goal of selling 10 million of the hybrid iPod-cell phone-Internet surfing gadgets by the end of 2008. So far, Apple has sold 5.4 million iPhones, according to the latest data as of the end of March.
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One way Apples expanding the iPhones reach is by inking deals with wireless carriers around the world, even breaking with its pattern of requiring exclusivity to sell in a certain country.
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On Monday, four mobile providers in the Asia-Pacific region announced partnerships with Apple to bring the iPhone to their regions later this year.
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SingTel will sell the gadget in Singapore, Bharti Airtel Ltd. in India, Globe Telecom Inc. in the
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SingTel owns Optus and holds a 30.5 percent stake in Bharti and 44.5 percent in Globe. SingTel has about 2.3 million mobile subscribers in
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Last week, the top mobile phone operator in
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In recent weeks Apple has also signed deals with Rogers Communications Inc. to sell the device in
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Until the spate of the latest deals, Apple adhered to its policy of exclusivity with one carrier in each country.
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The exclusive deals for the iPhone were with AT&T Inc. in the
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Industry observers say some people may be holding off on buying an iPhone until the much-rumored next-generation of the device is launched, and the phone is officially rolled out in more countries.
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It takes some technical gymnastics, but its still possible to get the phone in some markets where Apple doesn’t have arrangements with wireless carriers.
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Many of the phones sold so far have been bought legitimately in one country, modified to work on any cellular network, and resold in countries where Apple doesn’t have agreements to sell the iPhone. The trend expands the iPhones reach but deprives Apple of some of the subscriber fees that Apple splits with its carrier partners.
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Another knock against the iPhones current design is that it works over so-called 2.5G networks instead of the faster 3G, or third-generation, cell phone networks, which are popular outside the
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Apples chief executive, Steve Jobs, has said Apple went with the slower cellular technology because the chips for 3G networks were too bulky and power-hungry when the iPhone was being designed, and because the iPhone automatically switches to faster Wi-Fi networks when they’re available.
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The next generation of iPhones is expected to work over 3G networks, which makes tasks like downloading videos easier.
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Apple is also planning a software update for this summer that makes the iPhone work better with corporate e-mail, a necessary upgrade to help the iPhone compete with Research in Motion Ltd.s BlackBerry and Palm Inc.s Treo smart phones.
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Girding for a fight with Apple in the business-oriented smart-phone space, Research In Motion on Monday unveiled the Bold, its first BlackBerry model to work over 3G, helping its shares climb to an all-time high of $143.08. The stock closed Monday up $9.20, or 6.9 percent, at $141.97.
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