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Will July 11 be a nightmare for 3G iPhone buyers?

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Remember last June when long lines of people snaked around Apple and AT&T company-owned stores waiting to purchase the iPhone? Well some are predicting that the wait for the 3G iPhone could be even worse. Last year, buyers could take the iPhone home to activate it. This year, the 3G iPhone will have to be activated before consumers leave the store--a potential retail wrinkle that could make lines longer and move slower. The reason for the in-store activation is to stop the flow of inactivated iPhones to the black market. Of course, AT&T has said that it will offer an unlocked version of the 3G iPhone "in the future," but it will be costly. An 8-gigabyte unit will cost $599, and a 16-gig model will cost $699--or $400 more than the subsidized version. 

To help speed the process, AT&T is urging buyers to be ready with all the necessary paperwork-- or better yet, visit the store ahead of time to get an advance credit check. For more tips, watch this AT&T video on how to get 'iReady.  

For more:
- see this article

 

Related stories:
AT&T to consumers: get 'iReady' for the 3G iPhone
iPhone: rumors and consumer rebellion
Report: 3G iPhone costs $173 to make
AT&T will subsidize 3G iPhone

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More stories about iPhone   AT&T   Apple   3G  

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Just wait for another 6 months, and you will get an unlocked iPhone 3G in China for less than $250. The unlocked one is already in Shenzhen, but just need more times for more features to be open.

Over 2000 engineers are decoding and reverse engineering the 3G version, and it is to be open pretty soon.

As long as it is locked by an engineer, there is another engineer can unlock it - that's the theory of reverse engineering.

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