The iPhone Eyes Japan
December 20, 2007 | by Christopher Nickson
The iPhone is already huge, but now Apple is looking at Japan, one of the world's toughest markets.
The iPhone has been the story of 2007 for most people, released in the US and Europe in a cloud of hype. But among all the words, there’s one story that hasn’t been told, and that’s the iPhone in Japan.
There’s a good reason for that. Japan might be one of the world’s leading technology market, but the iPhone isn’t available there. Yet. That’s something the company is eager to change. According to the Wall Street Journal, Steve Jobs has been talking to a couple of Japanese mobile carriers, although Apple would not confirm the story.
Since Apple wants to have 1% of the cell phone market by the end of 2008, and Japan has 100 million cell phone users, the company could well be eager to get its teeth into a market where consumers brace new technology.
The most sophisticated phones on the market are in Japan. Japan leads the world in different features and phone capabilities. The iPhone faces some stiff competition if it gets to Japan, because you have a large number of devices that have WiFi, that have large screens, that have full browsers and GPS (global positioning system) as well," Chris Hazelton, an IDC analyst, told MacNewsWorld.
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