Russians may soon get their chance to queue up to buy the Apple iPhone. Legally, that is.
Official sales of
the iPhone are likely to start in
October, with a deal having been reached between Apple and Mobile TeleSystems,
Russia's largest carrier,
according to
the Reuters news agency, citing market sources. A second, carrier has also
signed a framework agreement, and a third deal is in the offing, Reuters
reported.
A mobile telecommunications analyst told Reuters that MTS aims to sell 1
million iPhones within two years, and that total sales by the top three carriers
over that two-year period are expected to hit 3.5 million units.
The price to Russian consumers is expected to be 24,000 rubles, or about
US$990. That's far higher than the price in the US, but much less, Reuters said,
than the price of unauthorized iPhones already being scooped up in Russia.
There are reportedly 600,000 unauthorized iPhones already in Russian
hands.
When Apple announced the latest iPhone, the 3G, in June, CEO Steve Jobs set a
goal of getting the device into 70 countries "over the next several months". But in the big map of the world on display
during his keynote address at Apple's
Worldwide Developer Conference, Russia was a large and conspicuous void--as was
its sizable neighbor, China.
Also at WWDC in June, Jobs said he expected Apple to sell 10 million phones
this year.
CNET News
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