SuperPac
Member
Color?
Green, no case.
Color?
Green, no case.
Mine is out for delivery to my carrier's closest store. That's how they did the pre-orders here. Should be there by noon.
Probably got faster shipping to a business anyways.
How would any of us possibly know other than guessing wildly?As an aside, does anyone think there will be a 6C next year? Or just a 5C, 5S and new 6?
How would any of us possibly know other than guessing wildly?
As an aside, does anyone think there will be a 6C next year? Or just a 5C, 5S and new 6?
As an aside, does anyone think there will be a 6C next year? Or just a 5C, 5S and new 6?
Probably a 6. If they continue the trend from this year, what internals would the 6C be? The 5s? Dunno if you can use the fingerprint sensor in that plastic body. As another aside, I have no idea if that's true or not lol![]()
5C, 5CS and 6
BELIEVE
Mainly because the apple store will carry hundreds, while the carrier store is lucky to have 50 most of the time.Why are so many people going to the Apple Store to get their phone instead of their carrier? The Apple Store in Center City, Philly has had a line around the block all day. Meanwhile, all the carrier stores around it are virtually empty. I doubt THAT many people are buying their phones unlocked. I walked into the Sprint store 2 blocks away and walked out with my 5c in less than a half hour. Is there some benefit to buying it direct from Apple that I don't know about?
I don't understand why people are buying this phone. Those who are, why?
If it's the aesthetics, I suppose I can get it, but I just can't see the point in choosing to not spend $100 more for something that is much better and will last longer.
I don't understand why people are buying this phone. Those who are, why?
If it's the aesthetics, I suppose I can get it, but I just can't see the point in choosing to not spend $100 more for something that is much better and will last longer.
I don't understand why people are buying this phone. Those who are, why?
If it's the aesthetics, I suppose I can get it, but I just can't see the point in choosing to not spend $100 more for something that is much better and will last longer.
1) I like the look. Even now, having it in my possession, the 5c is such a chic (but not pretentious-looking) device. I almost don't want to put a case on it. And, unlike the 4/5/5c I don't FEEL like I have to. The 5c doesn't look like it'll shatter at the slightest bump. Truthfully, I always resented the look of the 4/5. It was the first time I felt like Apple sacrificed function for form...and the countless iPhones that shattered after the smallest of drops confirm this.
2) I like the price, but not because I can't "afford" the the 5s. Honestly, it's not that I couldn't spend 200+ on a smartphone, but I refuse to do that for something that feels like an iterative design. People make a big to-do about the 5s' 64bit processor but, realistically, it'll be years before the app world at large catches up, and by then I'll be up for another upgrade and Apple will have introduced a newer, better iPhone to take advantage of 64bit apps. The 5c just feels like such an in-between device, and I refuse to pay a premium for that. In the future, when the iPhone 6 (or 6s) comes out and really WOWS the world, I'll be more than happy to drop $200 for one. But now? A slightly better processor (in real world usage) and a slightly better camera just aren't worth it to me.
3) Before I made my purchase, I spent a decent amount of time holding display models of both phones, and it confirmed what I always felt: despite being plastic, the 5c just FEELS so much sturdier. This is important to me because I had to go through the hell of a damaged iPhone for months.
I get the aesthetic part, but I can't understand 2) unless contracts work differently where you are from.
Aesthetics aside, you're saving $100 over the course of two years (or at least 18 months). That's a very small amount to save when you could have had double the performance (even before apps are being developed with 64-bit in mind), a fingerprint scanner (doesn't matter if you don't use passwords to lock your phone, I suppose), and a better camera.
I can totally understand holding off if you got a 5 last year, or even if you have a 4S or some other relatively powerful phone, but if you're going to be buying one anyway and renewing or starting a long-term contract, it just seems like it makes more sense to get the one that will be faster in day-to-day performance and have superior features for a very pretty minor premium. Aesthetics aside, of course.
You have to realize that a large majority of people don't think like this. They just see 100 dollar iphone and see the deal. Honestly Apple is probably going to make a shit ton of money on these phones in the long run. Especially when they become the free phone in a year.I get the aesthetic part, but I can't understand 2) unless contracts work differently where you are from.
Aesthetics aside, you're saving $100 over the course of two years (or at least 18 months). That's a very small amount to save when you could have had double the performance (even before apps are being developed with 64-bit in mind), a fingerprint scanner (doesn't matter if you don't use passwords to lock your phone, I suppose), and a better camera.
I can totally understand holding off if you got a 5 last year, or even if you have a 4S or some other relatively powerful phone, but if you're going to be buying one anyway and renewing or starting a long-term contract, it just seems like it makes more sense to get the one that will be faster in day-to-day performance and have superior features for a very pretty minor premium. Aesthetics aside, of course.
Lol that this thread had 1/100 the posts of the 5s thread and the 5c will sell ten times more.
Oh enthusiasts.
1) I like the look. Even now, having it in my possession, the 5c is such a chic (but not pretentious-looking) device. I almost don't want to put a case on it. And, unlike the 4/5/5c I don't FEEL like I have to. The 5c doesn't look like it'll shatter at the slightest bump. Truthfully, I always resented the look of the 4/5. It was the first time I felt like Apple sacrificed function for form...and the countless iPhones that shattered after the smallest of drops confirm this.
2) I like the price, but not because I can't "afford" the the 5s. Honestly, it's not that I couldn't spend 200+ on a smartphone, but I refuse to do that for something that feels like an iterative design. People make a big to-do about the 5s' 64bit processor but, realistically, it'll be years before the app world at large catches up, and by then I'll be up for another upgrade and Apple will have introduced a newer, better iPhone to take advantage of 64bit apps. The 5c just feels like such an in-between device, and I refuse to pay a premium for that. In the future, when the iPhone 6 (or 6s) comes out and really WOWS the world, I'll be more than happy to drop $200 for one. But now? A slightly better processor (in real world usage) and a slightly better camera just aren't worth it to me.
3) Before I made my purchase, I spent a decent amount of time holding display models of both phones, and it confirmed what I always felt: despite being plastic, the 5c just FEELS so much sturdier. This is important to me because I had to go through the hell of a damaged iPhone for months.
I got a green 5C today. My first iPhone!
A few reasons I didn't get the 5S:
1) Price - I'm on T-Mobile so it's $549 vs $699, not $99 vs $199.
2) Availability - 5C was available as a walk-in. Wouldn't expect to get a 5S w/o a preorder
3) I'm upgrading from a really, really shitty Android phone, so I really don't need top-of-the-line performance, and the 5C performs exceedingly well.
4) It's green.
I wanted the yellow one, but they didn't receive any and I wasn't in a position to wait (said shitty android phone was going dead within 45 minutes).
Don't know what Apple was thinking with the pink/salmon color. A nice fire-engine red would have made that my first choice.
I very much doubt this. The new iPhone has historically sold at least three times more than the year old model alongside it. A blue and pink models ain't going to change that although 5s supply constraints might. The iPhone 4 actually was the second best selling model last year so the 5c has to top the 'free' 4s before coming close to the 5s. That's probably Apple's main goal, to shift the balance from the 'free' phone to the midrange. If the 5c does end up selling ten times more than the 5s I'd be concerned about Apple's long term image.
Yes, which is why the 5c should sell better than the 4s, butIf it looks new, it is new.
If the 5C does end up selling considerably more than the 5S, Id say thats a disturbing lesson for Apple and troubling news for those of us who want Apple to keep making the best stuff.
If Apple sees they can sell older tech in a colour plastic shell and sell ten times more than the latest and greatest iphone, then what incentive do they have to make these iPhones thinner, lighter, faster, etc?
I expect the 5C to do better than other $100, year-old models. But if it truly blows away the 5S in sales, then 1) Id be surprised and 2) Apple may have some interesting choices to make about their future lineups.
launch day crowds are unsurprisingly going for the 5S. I doubt well have any idea how much the split is between these two models. Im guessing well know pretty well for next years iphone launch.
If theres a 6 and 6C right off the bat, then Id say the 5C was a big success. If theres just a 6 and then the 5S selling for $100, then thatd be a pretty clear admission that the c experiment didnt take off the way Apple wanted.
Pretty sure the iPad mini is also outselling regular iPad.
That's a little extreme. The iBook outsold the PowerBook for a while and the world didn't end. They will continue to have two lines from here in out.
Lol that this thread had 1/100 the posts of the 5s thread and the 5c will sell ten times more.
Oh enthusiasts.
That's a little extreme. The iBook outsold the PowerBook for a while and the world didn't end. They will continue to have two lines from here in out.
I think the law of demand holds true in many markets, including the phone market.And the MacBook Air outsells the MacBook Pro. I don't think these examples apply to the phone market.
I think the law of demand holds true in many markets, including the phone market.
I'm not against plastic phones. I very much prefer the ergonomics of the curved edges on the 5c. But at the end of the day it's still a plastic phone heavier and thicker than an iPhone 5. (heck, it's heavier and thicker than a Galaxy S4). There ain't nothing chic about it.
I'm not sure I agree. Subsidies distort demand, but it doesn't distort the price difference between the two, at least outside Japan.The demand is distorted in the phone market by carrier subsidies and obfuscating contracts. There's only demand for iPhone 5c in countries where most customers are on contract (mainly USA, Canada and Japan and Japan has a price war going where the iPhone 5s is basically the same 'contract price' as a 5c). In other countries there's just no demand. Those who barely afford an iPhone will go for the 4s (or 4 in China where it's still available) and the others with enough money will go for the 5s...
Ha, reminds of all the people who bought a Nexus4 from T-mobile for $430 when Google was selling it for $350.
However, it is a ripoff and people can see it. I expected it to flop (for a new iPhone at least), and after seeing how widely available it is in shops around the city I have to say it seems like it is. It is a good product, but it is priced so close to the clearly superior 5S that people don't want it.
I don't understand why people are buying this phone. Those who are, why?
If it's the aesthetics, I suppose I can get it, but I just can't see the point in choosing to not spend $100 more for something that is much better and will last longer.
This is a very old Apple sales technique. Apple is 100% fine with cannibalizing their own products, as long as you buy Apple.
I got a green 5C today. My first iPhone!
A few reasons I didn't get the 5S:
1) Price - I'm on T-Mobile so it's $549 vs $699, not $99 vs $199.
2) Availability - 5C was available as a walk-in. Wouldn't expect to get a 5S w/o a preorder
3) I'm upgrading from a really, really shitty Android phone, so I really don't need top-of-the-line performance, and the 5C performs exceedingly well.
4) It's green.
I wanted the yellow one, but they didn't receive any and I wasn't in a position to wait (said shitty android phone was going dead within 45 minutes).
Don't know what Apple was thinking with the pink/salmon color. A nice fire-engine red would have made that my first choice.
I suppose I just consider the 5C to be one of the more cynical Apple products theyve made and not a really interesting or desirable product.
If it sells well, OK. but when I hear hyperbole like it could have "10 times 5S sales (sorry, Juice, i took your post literally), I cant help but think what would happen if that were true and it bums me out a little.
It feels better in your hand than any other iPhone, 5S included, and the colours really are nice.
I have yet to see confirmation of "double the performance" tbh. In fact, most reviews I've read have confirmed that 5s' real world performance (navigating iOS7, using current apps) is mostly marginal, and the general consensus seems to be "The phone is future-proof. The apps that show off the extra power will come in time." Well, in the meantime, I'm more than comfortable with the 5c.
Sure, it's only 100 dollars savings, but a lot of people (such as myself) are more concerned with the upfront cost. In that sense, I can think of other things to spend that extra $100 that's not a phone with improvements I only see as iterative (right now).
I very much doubt this. The new iPhone has historically sold at least three times more than the year old model alongside it. A blue and pink models ain't going to change that although 5s supply constraints might. The iPhone 4 actually was the second best selling model last year so the 5c has to top the 'free' 4s before coming close to the 5s. That's probably Apple's main goal, to shift the balance from the 'free' phone to the midrange. If the 5c does end up selling ten times more than the 5s I'd be concerned about Apple's long term image.