
*Do they know something we don't? ;-)* ** ** *Two Weeks, 5 IPhones Sold in Chinese Online Store* By Owen Fletcher, IDG News Service - Thu Dec 3, 2009 4:20AM EST China Unicom has sold just five iPhones through a big online retail site in the two weeks since it opened the virtual store, the latest sign that the handset is suffering in China from its high price and lack of Wi-Fi. An official iPhone store on Taobao.com<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/pcworld/tc_pcworld/storytext/twoweeks5iphonessoldinchineseonlinestore/34292489/SIG=10jq1m4gl;_ylt=At9.601piBIjE8xlsHZm1bjiS5A5/*http://Taobao.com>, the biggest Chinese e-commerce Web site similar to eBay, has sold just two 8GB iPhones and three 16GB iPhones, according to figures on the site. The store launched in the middle of last month, a few weeks after China Unicom began offering the first official iPhones in China. China Unicom is also selling iPhones through its own Web site, which does not list sale figures. But Taobao is China's top online retail site and many users turn to it to buy items like mobile phones and laptops. The China Unicom iPhones have to compete with iPhones brought into the country from abroad, which users have bought since long before the official handset arrived. iPhones bought outside China have Wi-Fi, which was removed from the China Unicom iPhones to comply with local regulations. The official handset is also more expensive than iPhones bought elsewhere. The 32GB iPhone 3GS with no service contract costs 6,999 yuan (US$1,024) in China, compared to about US$800 in nearby Hong Kong. Slow sales at the online shop follow earlier signs that the official iPhone is unpopular in China. China Unicom has reportedly said it sold just 5,000 iPhones in the few days after its launch. That contrasts with the more than 60,000 online orders South Korean carrier KT received before launching the iPhone in its country last week. Difficulty using the App Store may be another strike against the iPhone for Chinese users. Credit cards are increasingly common in China, but their holders rarely use them to make small payments via mobile phone, local consultancy Analysys International said in a research note. Credit card penetration also remains low among young people of the sort that would like the App Store, it said. Many Chinese make payments via mobile phone but do so with prepaid cards sold by local carriers. The App Store will need to add new payment options and more localized content to win more users in China, the consultancy said. China Unicom has kept outwardly positive about the iPhone's prospects. A company executive last month said China Unicom expects 10 percent of China's 3G users to buy iPhones, according to Chinese state media.

Maybe the Chinese are peculiar, or the price is just too high compared to other high end handsets. And the cheap Chinese iPhone knock-offs with as many as 3 SIM card slots are widely available and very popular. The resemble the genuine iPhone till you get to the fake iPhone OS X and realise it is just too fake. And we have a new iPhone 4G (or iPhone LTE) coming soon, may be the Chinese who work in the sweatshops in Downtown Shanghai that make the iPhone has told the local populace to just wait for the new iPhone.

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And we have a new iPhone 4G... has told the local populace to just wait for the new iPhone.
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Or mabbe they already have the blue prints for 4G phones and chinese are already walking around with 4G knock off waiting for the technology to be rolled out on the networks ? Ericsson is already planning to roll out 4G trials via LTE technology, so I think they are there...

On Thu, Dec 3, 2009 at 2:43 PM, Philip Musyoki <pmusyoki@gmail.com> wrote:
Maybe the Chinese are peculiar, or the price is just too high compared to other high end handsets. And the cheap Chinese iPhone knock-offs with as many as 3 SIM card slots are widely available and very popular. The resemble the genuine iPhone till you get to the fake iPhone OS X and realise it is just too fake.
And we have a new iPhone 4G (or iPhone LTE) coming soon, may be the Chinese who work in the sweatshops in Downtown Shanghai that make the iPhone has told the local populace to just wait for the new iPhone.
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@Philip, Ndungu : I almost fell off my chair with laughter after reading the article. :-))))) When I was there last year, 2 things are etched in memory. Once some friends and I went to downtown Beijing Silk market to window shop. Nearby was a phone shop and it had the iphone. Well someone, against our friendly advice on the iphone being a 0.1 iphone, went ahead and bought it. And later he discovered many things missing in the OS, we could but only "insult" him further! On the second trip, someone else decided to buy a 32GB flash disk and we cautioned him against such a thing. It was branded Sony but this Sony was different. Getting back and connecting it, the 32GB showed up four 8GB partitions which could not be formatted easily! Its good fun to see the things are not what they seem and further add "insult" to injury... :-)) But I got to say these guys are very smart. Anyone on this list, how do you clone an iPhone OS and make sure that the chipsets can work with the OS? In what street do the chinese make the processors? Nice article... :-)

They do not clone the iPhone OS, they jus develop a semblance of iPhone OS from scratch, and I think there is one company that make the chips and sell to guys who concot the contraptions from fake Nokia Phone and fake iPhone and Nintendo Wiis. All they need to do is tweak the fake OS for their particular device. I once saw a fake Nokia with a fake Nokia OS, and instead of 'Connecting People', it was written 'Nokia - Conecting People.'
participants (3)
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aki
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ndungu stephen
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Philip Musyoki