precisely because the price cut was more or less announced, and they didn't repeat their previous mistake.
Last time you got a store credit cos' you could complain.
Here, how can you complain when you're told in advance that it'll get cheaper soon. If you still buy now, it means you're prepared to pay knowingly, and thus don't need a credit.
This is one of those "the sun will rise in the east tomorrow morning" stories. Of course they'll cut the price and in time, and eventually discontinue the lower capacity model. But, after the fuss in the summer there is no serious chance they will do this in February. I was actually a little surprised they charged more for the 16GB model; I'd imagined they would just bump the 8GB model and leave the price the same. They didn't; they're not going to change their minds over a couple of weeks.
There's a 32GB Touch, eh? Hmmm. I'm normally very sceptical of Apple products, but an all-Flash player with a really nice interface would be tempting when my uber-brilliant but sadly unsucceeded iAudio X5L finally dies.
That said, i still hate iTunes, I love OGGs, and I'm willing to bet I can get higher quality audio out of my player. Let's hope a rival makes one that's cheaper, appears as a flash drive without software, and plays OGGs. I'd buy one in roughly 0.0006 nanoseconds.
So Apple will reduce the price of a premium product in the future. You mean like every other product in the world then?
Of course it will happen - even more so if they're about to introduce a "premium" version of the iPhone (think 3G, and probably with 32Gb flash to match the Touch and further differentiate).
Is the iPod like the Big Mac index of consumer electronics? #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 14:01 GMT
I only ask, because it would make a lot of sense to use the iPod: only a few rigidly priced retailers; clockwork price reduction mechanism; Apple take a very stable cut of the RRP/BOM difference. Hmmm...
Just type it buddy. Please don't buy Apple products right now. I'm short the stock, and need next quarters numbers to look terrible so I can buy my new iPhone.
When does a company need to announce a price cut? The proper way is if you have a new product coming out, you drop the price of the old or just discontinue it and bring the new one in at the price point you want.
Memory prices fall all of the time. If you buy a mirco-SD card and in a few months when it is about half the price when it was when you bought it, do you complain and ask for a credit?
Technology gets cheaper; always has and always will.
I understand them dropping the price once, and giving store credit - but to do it a second time would seriously undermine consumer confidence, and make everyone think twice about buying any iPhone products in the future.
Apple to announce iPhone and iPod Touch price cuts?
Lance
Why wait? #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 06:31 GMT
Why wait when you can buy it now and then complain about the price drop and get a store credit from Apple?
Anonymous Coward
@Lance #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 09:22 GMT
Maybe because there's a little amount of groceries/clothes/gas/diesel at the Apple store?
Anonymous Coward
pricing space? #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 10:03 GMT
'Speculation suggests that the price drops are in order to make way for "pricing space" for the 3G iPhone'
nothing to do with it only selling well in the US then, and leaving Apple far short of the numbers they expected
http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/Apple-smartphone-iPhone,news-27412.html
Greg
Maybe because... #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 10:03 GMT
precisely because the price cut was more or less announced, and they didn't repeat their previous mistake.
Last time you got a store credit cos' you could complain.
Here, how can you complain when you're told in advance that it'll get cheaper soon. If you still buy now, it means you're prepared to pay knowingly, and thus don't need a credit.
fluffels
not happening #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 11:12 GMT
i have reliable sauce.
it no happen.
'pricing space' is balls, they won't reduce a price pending a new product introduction. you arses.
Alex Johnson
Whatever #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 11:20 GMT
This is one of those "the sun will rise in the east tomorrow morning" stories. Of course they'll cut the price and in time, and eventually discontinue the lower capacity model. But, after the fuss in the summer there is no serious chance they will do this in February. I was actually a little surprised they charged more for the 16GB model; I'd imagined they would just bump the 8GB model and leave the price the same. They didn't; they're not going to change their minds over a couple of weeks.
Greg
Hmmm..... #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 11:37 GMT
There's a 32GB Touch, eh? Hmmm. I'm normally very sceptical of Apple products, but an all-Flash player with a really nice interface would be tempting when my uber-brilliant but sadly unsucceeded iAudio X5L finally dies.
That said, i still hate iTunes, I love OGGs, and I'm willing to bet I can get higher quality audio out of my player. Let's hope a rival makes one that's cheaper, appears as a flash drive without software, and plays OGGs. I'd buy one in roughly 0.0006 nanoseconds.
Snake Plissken
@Fluffles #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 11:57 GMT
"i have reliable sauce"
Ketchup, presumably.
Scott Mckenzie
Reliable Sauce #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 12:35 GMT
Reggae Reggae of course!!
Anonymous Coward
From the "no sh1t Sherlock" department #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 14:01 GMT
So Apple will reduce the price of a premium product in the future. You mean like every other product in the world then?
Of course it will happen - even more so if they're about to introduce a "premium" version of the iPhone (think 3G, and probably with 32Gb flash to match the Touch and further differentiate).
Tom
Is the iPod like the Big Mac index of consumer electronics? #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 14:01 GMT
I only ask, because it would make a lot of sense to use the iPod: only a few rigidly priced retailers; clockwork price reduction mechanism; Apple take a very stable cut of the RRP/BOM difference. Hmmm...
Mike
Love the negativity #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 14:01 GMT
Don't buy. Wait for the Osbourne II. It's coming.
No... wait for the G3 iPhone. It's coming.
No, the price is dropping.
Just type it buddy. Please don't buy Apple products right now. I'm short the stock, and need next quarters numbers to look terrible so I can buy my new iPhone.
Bullocks.
Lance
@Greg #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 18:54 GMT
When does a company need to announce a price cut? The proper way is if you have a new product coming out, you drop the price of the old or just discontinue it and bring the new one in at the price point you want.
Memory prices fall all of the time. If you buy a mirco-SD card and in a few months when it is about half the price when it was when you bought it, do you complain and ask for a credit?
Technology gets cheaper; always has and always will.
Rob McDougall
Pah #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 20:24 GMT
I understand them dropping the price once, and giving store credit - but to do it a second time would seriously undermine consumer confidence, and make everyone think twice about buying any iPhone products in the future.