I was particularly keen to see the details of yesterday’s keynote as I had recently received the okay from the wife to upgrade my deceased iPod to a shiny new iPhone. While my desire to purchase one was never officially stymied by her, she had previously expressed a general disinterest in the product that was largely directed at the price1. I might have purchased an iPhone myself, but it would come bundled with a hefty serving of marital antipathy. It wasn’t as if I had the money at the time anyway.
In any event, when the iPhone 1.0 shipped last year I did not get one. I said I’d replace my iPod with one. Lo and behold, a few short weeks ago my 4G iPod up and died on me. “Such timing!” I thought to myself, “The new iPhone will be surely be announced in June.” And, as we all know, it was. Now I had a hat trick: dead iPod, wifely consent, and a brand new device. Not only that, but the release date just so happens to be a day I have off from work. This was kismet, assuredly.
I’ve spent the last few days in a buzz of excitement. The new iPhone is coming, and I’m going to get one.
And then, AT&T went and spoiled my buzz.
First, the new iPhone requires in-store activation. Opening day is doing to crawl. I don’t know if they’ve figured out some extra special way to move people in and out of the store, but I have never been able to get a new phone, activate it, and leave a store in less than 45 minutes. That even excludes shopping, as I knew precisely the phone I intended to get the minute I walked in the door. Second, they raised the price of a data plan, presumably to defray the cost of 3G2. Third, the subsidized price drop means I presumably will have to pay an undisclosed increased price as being a loyal AT&T customer without a 2G iPhone I am at the whim of AT&T’s upgrade policy. My date of eligibility is September 29, 2008.
What I don’t know, as mobile phone companies seem to thrive on this sort of obfuscation, is whether I could just sign a new contract and get the discount or if I can even buy an unsubsidized phone at all. It would appear that either way I’ll be getting an extension of my contract, which I don’t really give two shits about. It gets even more complicated when the type of plan I have is considered. Last year the wife and I made the ill-advised move to a family/shared plan, thinking it would save us money. It did not. In fact, we spend more now with a family plan than we had individually while getting fewer minutes. Thanks, assholes.
I’ll be getting one, AT&T shenanigans or no. I just wish this year’s sale could be more like last year’s.
1 A few years ago she expressed nearly identical opinions at length regarding the iPod before ultimately caving in and buying one herself. I think it’s a consumer defense mechanism.
2 A raise in price has the nasty side-effect of forcing much of the country to pay for a service they can’t have, as 3G coverage is far from universal.
Shouldn’t it be, “In which AT&T and APPLE gives me a swift kick in the nards as a reward for being a loyal customer”? Apple didn’t have to agree to the new activation/price model. I’d be surprised if there is an unsubsidized price. From the looks of it, you can buy without being in upgrade status, you just have to re-up your contract with shitty AT&T for two more years. Is the iPhone really worth two more years in hell, and the possiblity of not being jailbroken? As an iPhone 1.0 user, I’d not have purchased it were it not for all the wonderful third party apps.