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iPhone sales halted after shoppers pelt Apple store


BEIJING |
Fri Jan 13, 2012 8:21am EST

BEIJING (Reuters) – Enraged Chinese shoppers pelted Apple Inc’s flagship Beijing store with eggs and shoving matches broke out with police on Friday when customers were told the store would not begin sales of the iPhone 4S as scheduled.

Apple said later after the fracas at its store in Beijing’s trendy Sanlitun district that it would halt all retail sales of the latest iPhone in China for the time being, but said the phones would be available online, through its partner China Unicom or at official Apple resellers.

Sales at Apple’s other store in Beijing and three in Shanghai went more smoothly, with stocks quickly selling out.

An announcer with a bullhorn told the Sanlitun store crowd around 7 a.m., before sunrise, that the phones would not go on sale as planned and that they should leave. As the crowd became more unruly, scuffles broke out between security staff and shoppers, many of whom had waited overnight in freezing weather. Police moved in and dragged some people away. Photos appeared on the Chinese blogosphere of a man who had brought raw eggs in a plastic bag, handing them out before people heaved them at the store’s tall glass windows.

“We’re suffering from cold and hunger,” a man in his 20s shouted to Reuters Television. “They said they’re not going to sell to us. Why? Why?”

“I got in line around 11 p.m., and beyond the line, the plaza was chock full with people,” said Huang Xiantong, 26, from northeastern Liaoning province.

“Around 5 a.m. the crowds in the plaza broke through and the line disappeared entirely. Everyone was fighting, several people were hurt. The police just started hitting people. They were just brawling.”

Police ordered the closure of the store, according to a source close to the situation.

Apple’s latest iPhone, with features including responding to commands with its own voice, was introduced in China and 21 other countries on Friday. Prices ranged from 4,988 to 6,788 yuan ($792 to $1,077).

Apple, in a statement, said its other stores had sold out.

“Unfortunately we were unable to open our store at Sanlitun due to the large crowd and to ensure the safety of our customers and employees, the iPhone will not be available in our retail stores in Beijing and Shanghai for the time being,” it said.

The snafu lit up China’s microblog community. One commentator likened the queues to this month’s annual Spring (New Year) Festival rush to buy train tickets home.

“If people had to make a choice, I think iPhone fans would rather buy an iPhone 4S than go home,” said the blogger, using the online name Zhang Xinchun Daqi.

LEGIONS OF FANS AND SCALPERS

Apple products are wildly popular with Chinese eager to acquire the latest technology first. Many customers in Beijing appeared to be scalpers hoping to scoop up iPhones for resale.

Scalpers are a common sight outside Apple’s stores in China, selling genuine Apple products, usually iPhones, at a markup for customers unwilling to queue or faced with stores out of stock.

At the Sanlitun store, people who appeared to be working on behalf of scalpers were queuing in groups of 50, wearing the same hats or gloves, said Huang, the Liaoning shopper. “The police talked with their leaders,” he said.

Scalpers who ran advertisements online hired thousands of people to stand in line at the Apple stores, offering 100 yuan ($16) per person plus dinner, the Global Times reported.

One organizer surnamed Wei, contacted by the Global Times posing as a job seeker, said he would also pay a 20 percent commission for every additional person brought along.

One scalper in his 40s outside Beijing’s other store in the busy Xidan shopping district, who gave his name as Deng, said he was seeking a markup of 1,000 yuan ($160).

“I think 1,000 is profit enough. If I ask more, people won’t pay,” said Deng, who had queued since 5 p.m. on Thursday. “But actually we’re performing a service for people who don’t want to wait in the cold. People with money don’t care if it costs a little more.”

The Xidan store had sold out its entire stock of 2,000 by 9 a.m., one shopper was told.

Apple executives were unavailable to comment on sales, but the company typically does not disclose such figures.

Official resellers continued to sell the new phone. One next to the Xidan store ran out by early afternoon.

Shoppers had mostly left the Sanlitun store by 10 a.m. It remained closed later, ringed by about 50 police at lunchtime.

At one of Shanghai’s three Apple stores, Jin Long, 24, said he had been in line since 2 p.m. on Thursday with the aim of securing a ticket to allow him to buy a new iPhone.

“After waiting all night and getting the card, my relative didn’t bring cash for the transaction and security guards and store workers tore up our tickets,” he told Reuters TV.

“With this kind of attitude, who wants to buy their machines in the future?”

(Additional reporting by Yang Ziyuan, Melanie Lee and Sabrina Mao; Editing by Don Durfee, Ken Wills and Ron Popeski)

Article source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/technologyNews/~3/ws-Vl-CwbcY/us-china-apple-idUSTRE80C08P20120113

China iPhone sales halted after shoppers pelt Apple store


BEIJING |
Fri Jan 13, 2012 2:28am EST

BEIJING (Reuters) – Enraged Chinese shoppers pelted Apple Inc’s flagship Beijing store with eggs and shoving matches with police broke out when customers were told the store would not begin sales of the popular iPhone 4S as scheduled.

Apple said later Friday after the botched launch at its store in Beijing’s trendy Sanlitun district that it would halt all retail sales of the latest iPhone in China for the time being, but said the phones would be available online, through its partner China Unicom or at official Apple resellers.

Scuffles broke out before daybreak between security staff and shoppers, many of whom had waited in line overnight in sub-freezing weather, after an announcer with a bullhorn told the restless crowd around 7 a.m. that the phones would not go on sale as planned and that they should go home.

Police dragged some people away and photos appeared on the Chinese blogosphere of a man who had brought raw eggs in a plastic bag handing them out before people heaved them at the store’s tall glass windows.

“We’re suffering from cold and hunger,” a man in his 20s shouted to Reuters Television. “They said they’re not going to sell to us. Why? Why?”

“I got in line around 11 p.m., and beyond the line the plaza was chock full with people,” said Huang Xiantong, 26, outside the store. “Around 5 a.m. the crowds in the plaza broke through and the line disappeared entirely. Everyone was fighting, several people were hurt,” said Huang, who wanted to buy a new iPhone for his girlfriend. “The police just started hitting people. They were just brawling.”

Apple’s latest iPhone, with a number of new features including responding to commands with a voice of its own, was introduced in China and 21 other countries on Friday to great anticipation.

“The demand for iPhone 4S has been incredible and our stores in China have already sold out,” Apple said in a statement. “Unfortunately we were unable to open our store at Sanlitun due to the large crowd and to ensure the safety of our customers and employees, the iPhone will not be available in our retail stores in Beijing and Shanghai for the time being,” Apple said.

Apple’s CEO, Tim Cook, said in a January 4 statement that “customer response to our products in China has been off the charts. With the launch in China…iPhone 4S will be available in over 90 countries making this our fastest iPhone rollout ever.”

The snafu lit up China’s vibrant microblog community with one commentator likening the line at the store to the country’s annual Spring Festival rush to buy cherished train tickets home.

“If people had to make a choice, I think iPhone fans would rather buy an iPhone 4S than go home,” said the blogger, using the online name Zhang Xinchun Daqi.

LEGIONS OF FANS AND SCALPERS

Apple’s products are wildly popular with Chinese customers, who are eager to be early adopters and get the latest technology first. Many of the customers in Beijing Friday appeared to be scalpers hoping to scoop up iPhones to resell.

Scalpers are a common sight outside Apple’s stores in China, selling genuine Apple products, usually iPhones, at a markup for people who don’t want to wait in line or find that stores are out of stock.

At the Sanlitun store, people who appeared to be working on behalf of scalpers were in line in groups of 50, wearing the same hats or gloves, said Huang, the Liaoning shopper. “The police talked with their leaders,” he said.

At least 1,000 people were hired by scalpers to stand in line for them at the Sanlitun store, the government-run news agency Xinhua said.

At Apple’s other store in Beijing’s Xidan district, iPhone 4S sales proceeded briskly with the store selling its entire stock of 2,000 by 9 a.m., one shopper at the store was told.

Official resellers, including one next to the Xidan store, continued to sell the iPhone 4S.

At the Sanlitun store the crowd had mostly left by 10 a.m., but the store remained closed and was ringed by about 50 police at lunchtime.

At one of Shanghai’s three Apple stores, 24-year-old Jin Long said he had been in line since 2 p.m. Thursday afternoon, receiving a coveted ticket allowing him to buy a new iPhone.

“After waiting all and getting the card, my relative didn’t bring cash for the transaction and security guards and store workers tore up our tickets,” he told Reuters TV. “With this kind of attitude, who wants to buy their machines in the future?”

(Additional reporting by Yang Ziyuan, Melanie Lee and Sabrina Mao; Editing by Don Durfee, Ken Wills and Matt Driskill)

Article source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/technologyNews/~3/ws-Vl-CwbcY/us-china-apple-idUSTRE80C08P20120113

New Mobile On-Site Computer Business Opens in Ventura County

Camarillo, CA, September 20, 2011 –(PR.com)– Rezilution Media Services provide custom build professional-grade computers to meet specific customer needs. In addition to computer upgrades and repairs, this business also offers virus and malware removal.

Additional Services:

•Apple and PC Computer Setups and Training
•Computer Diagnostics, Tune-up and PC repair
•Anti-virus and Spyware removal and protection
•Preventative maintenance
•Wireless Wired Network installation
•Software Installation, Upgrades
•Computer Component Cleaning
•Email and web browsing issues
•Printer, Fax installation help
•Website Design, Development Hosting

Rezilution Media Services one stop computer solutions provider. The service staffs are prompt, courteous, and efficient.

Standard hours for Rezilution Media Services are from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. After hours services are available from 5:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Sat. through Sun.

The telephone number is 805-443-0900, and the website is www.rezilution.com

Rezilution Media Services
PO Box 1508
Camarillo, CA 93011

###

Article source: http://www.pr.com/press-release/354596

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RIM to offer security features for iPhone, Android


TORONTO |
Tue Nov 29, 2011 4:54pm EST

TORONTO (Reuters) – Research In Motion is introducing a software tool that gives corporate customers the option of linking employees’ personal iPhones to the BlackBerry network without compromising security.

The move, announced on Tuesday, is RIM’s first tangible acknowledgment that it has lost its iron grip on the corporate smartphone market and must accommodate the growing preference of workers for Apple and Google’s Android devices. Its battered shares jumped on the announcement.

“It’s not an admission of guilt – it’s a necessary evil,” Suquehanna analyst Jeff Fidacaro said.

RIM’s Mobile Fusion service is designed to give the Canadian company the leading role in managing corporate communications, whether over the BlackBerry or a rival device.

“What our enterprise customers are looking for, and the opportunity for us, is to become the de facto platform,” Alan Panezic, RIM’s vice-president for enterprise product management, said in an interview ahead of the announcement.

Taking a first, tentative step to offer its network services independently of its own devices, the company could develop a fresh source of revenue to offset a shrinking market share in handsets.

Indeed, success with the strategy could encourage RIM to focus more and more on services rather than devices.

RIM’s often-volatile stock closed 5.4 percent higher at $17.37 on Nasdaq and up 5.5 percent at C$17.95 in Toronto. It still down more than 70 percent this year following a string of delayed or botched product launches, and disappointing quarterly results.

RIM’s BlackBerry was for years the preferred device for businesses and government agencies, who treasured its encrypted data and distributed the device to millions of workers needing secure, round-the-clock email access.

But many workers now prefer using their own Apple and Android-powered devices to access corporate emails, raising security questions for corporations, which RIM hopes to address with the new software.

“While a positive step, the larger challenges remain RIM’s need to narrow competitive gaps in its handsets,” RBC Capital Markets analyst Mike Abramsky wrote in a note to clients. He pointed to RIM’s software deficiencies and limited content and applications available on its devices.

RIM’s slice of the lucrative U.S. smartphone market fell to 9 percent in the third quarter, down from 24 percent a year earlier, according to research firm Canalys. Globally, the report placed RIM in fifth place, with 10 percent market share, compared with 15 percent a year earlier.

DUE BY LATE MARCH

Mobile Fusion, due in late March, will allow corporate information technology staff to set and monitor rules for passwords, apps and software on a range of devices, including Apple’s iPad and iPhone, and smartphones using the Android operating system.

A company can remotely lock or wipe a lost or stolen device, a key selling point for security-conscious corporations that may have been wary of shifting away from the BlackBerry.

“We will take full advantage of whatever security capabilities are provided by the core operating system. We’re not going to hold that back in any way, shape or form,” Panezic said.

Mobile Fusion will include and extend existing BlackBerry Enterprise Servers, or BES, behind corporate firewalls.

Panezic said the software will manage RIM’s PlayBook independently from a BlackBerry after the tablet – which has yet to gain traction with either businesses or consumers – receives a long-awaited software upgrade, due in February.

He declined to give any pricing details for the Fusion service, but said it would be competitive with rivals.

“It will help stem the tide of those companies that may have considered eliminating their BES but it won’t help sell more phones,” said Gartner analyst Phillip Redman. “That’s what they really need to do.”

“RATTLE SOME CAGES”

RIM has recently launched touchscreen devices using its legacy BlackBerry operating system as it works to put the QNX software powering the PlayBook on to a new generation of phones from early next year.

The new software follows on from the acquisition of device management company Ubitexx, which RIM announced in May.

Smaller companies such as Good Technology, MobileIron and BoxTone already offer device management as companies fret about leakage of sensitive commercial information via their workers’ personal, non-BlackBerry devices.

“This will definitely rattle some cages” among firms that filled a niche by securing and managing iPhones and other non-BlackBerry devices for corporations, Forrester analyst Christian Kane said.

Panezic said customers had requested a solution to handle Apple and Android devices, but RIM would consider adding support for other systems, such as Microsoft’s Windows Phone, if it saw enough demand.

($1=$1.03 Canadian)

(Reporting by Alastair Sharp; editing by Frank McGurty)

Article source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/technologyNews/~3/cMlszxKYyyA/us-rim-idUSTRE7AS0A720111129

RIM to offer security features on iPhone, Androids


TORONTO |
Tue Nov 29, 2011 12:13am EST

TORONTO (Reuters) – BlackBerry maker Research In Motion is seeking to cash in as companies switch to rival smartphones with a new tool that offers some of its important security features for sexier devices like the iPhone.

The company said on Tuesday that it will launch its new Mobile Fusion device management software in the first quarter, allowing corporate IT staff to set and monitor rules for passwords, apps and software on a range of devices, including Apple’s iPad and iPhone, and smartphones using Google’s Android operating system.

A company can remotely lock or wipe a lost or stolen device, a key selling point for security-conscious corporations who may have been wary of shifting away from the BlackBerry.

“What our enterprise customers are looking for, and the opportunity for us, is to become the de facto platform,” RIM’s vice-president for enterprise product management, Alan Panezic, told Reuters in an interview ahead of the announcement.

“We will take full advantage of whatever security capabilities are provided by the core operating system. We’re not going to hold that back in any way, shape or form.”

RIM’s BlackBerry was for years the preferred device for businesses and government agencies, who treasured its encrypted data and distributed the device to millions of workers needing secure, round-the-clock email access.

But many workers now prefer using their own Apple and Android-powered devices to access corporate emails, raising security questions for corporations that RIM hopes to address with the new software.

Mobile Fusion will sit next to existing BlackBerry Enterprise Servers (BES) behind corporate firewalls.

Panezic said the software will manage RIM’s PlayBook independently from a BlackBerry after the tablet – which has yet to gain traction with either business or consumer clients – receives a long-awaiting software upgrade, due in February.

He declined to give any pricing details for the Fusion service, but said it would be “competitive” with rivals.

“It will help stem the tide of those companies that may have considered eliminating their BES but it won’t help sell more phones,” said Gartner analyst Phillip Redman. “That’s what they really need to do.”

The new software follows on from RIM’s May acquisition of device management company Ubitexx, which RIM announced in May.

Smaller companies such as Good Technology, MobileIron and BoxTone already offer device management as companies fret about leakage of sensitive commercial information.

“This will definitely rattle some cages” among smaller companies, filling a niche by securing and managing iPhones and other non-BlackBerry devices for corporations, Forrester analyst Christian Kane said.

Panezic said customers had requested a solution to handle Apple and Android devices, but RIM would consider adding support for other systems, such as Microsoft’s Windows Phone, if there was enough demand.

RIM shares closed 3 percent higher at $16.48 on Nasdaq on Monday. They have fallen more than 70 percent this year.

(Reporting by Alastair Sharp; editing by Janet Guttsman)

Article source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/technologyNews/~3/cMlszxKYyyA/us-rim-idUSTRE7AS0A720111129

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