Bruno Afonso reacts as he is handed two iPhones to choose the color after Apples new phone went on sale for the first time in Portugal in the first minutes of Friday, July 11 2008, at a shop of carrier Vodafone in Lisbon.
The target of desire was Apple's much-hyped new product that uses 3G, or third-generation, cell phone technology -- an upgrade of the model that went on sale last year in the
"Just look at this obviously innovative design," said Yuki Kurita, emerging from a
The 23-year-old system engineer, among about 1,500 people who had camped out on the street by one downtown store, said he was too excited to feel tired and called his mother to boast about his new buy.
"I am so thrilled just thinking about how I get to touch this," he said, carrying bags of clothing and a skateboard he had used as a chair during his waitKurita acknowledged, though, that the iPhone would replace only one of his two phones. He and other Japanese buyers said they wanted to check out how services such as e-mail worked before they decide to forsake their old phones.
The iPhone's capabilities are less revolutionary in
But networks prevalent up to now offer only limited access to the Web, and the iPhone is designed to browse the Web in much the same way computers do. Its arrival marks a significant foreign entry in a market dominated by local brands.
Japanese media, including The Nikkei, the nation's top business daily, are talking about "iPhone shock," alluding to Commodore Matthew Perry's black ships that forced an isolationist feudal Japan to open to Western influence in the mid-1800s.
The frenzy over the iPhone was visible elsewhere in
In Hong Kong, designer Ho Kak-yin, 31, wearing a T-shirt that said, "Jealous?" was the first in line in a queue of about 100 inside a Hong Kong shopping mall.
"I'm very excited. It's very amazing," Ho said, after lining up two hours ahead of the kickoff.
Hundreds queued outside stores in
"Steve Jobs knows what people want," Web developer Lucinda McCullough told the Christchurch Press newspaper, referring to Apple's head. "And I need a new phone."
Exactly how many iPhones will be available has been uncertain, fueling the hype about the Apple gadget with a cool-factor reputation.
"This is the year that the cell phone becomes an Internet-connecting machine," Masayoshi Son, president of Softbank Corp., the only carrier selling the iPhone in
Softbank said it sold out of iPhones at three major
Tomohiko Katsu, a 38-year-old Japanese banker, said he has rarely lined up for any product in his life but wanted to make sure he got the iPhone and got in line Thursday afternoon.
"All the features come packed in a compact machine," he said. "It's really small for a mobile PC device."
A report this week by Mizuho Securities Co. said the iPhone's had potential to change lifestyles and bring new business opportunities.
Japanese tend to spend an hour or more on daily train commutes, and the iPhone could get them Netsurfing more than reading or listening to music, it said.
The iPhone's arrival could also change the relationship between manufacturers and carriers because of Apple's clout. Up to now, carriers have had considerable leverage over manufacturers, the report said.
In

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