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dustin33finger's blog: "iphone"

created on 07/10/2007  |  http://fubar.com/iphone/b100811


WASHINGTON--In our nation's great capital, where line-standing is an occupation unto itself, I was halfway expecting to see hordes of seasoned lackeys holding spots for high-powered lobbyists during my Friday afternoon circuit of five downtown AT&T stores prepared to offer up the iPhone.




But alas, instead of the usual guys in bike messenger garb holding up cardboard signs bearing their clients' handwritten names, I was confronted with relatively short lines containing earnest Applephiles, many still donning their buttoned-up office attire and ID card lanyards (among those I spotted: U.S. Department of State, DC government). Many of those who actually agreed to talk to me (remember, this is a city where people like to avoid going "on the record" whenever possible) admitted to be line-standing newbies that had gone starry-eyed over the hype surrounding the sleek gadget.




And there wasn't much of Camp iPhone mentality around these parts, either: with only one exception--a guy who refused to be named at a New York Avenue AT&T store who showed up at 6:30 a.m.--none of the lines began forming before about noon on Friday.




Line leaders willing to share their stories pretty much fit the Apple fanboy/girl profile. At a store near Dupont Circle, a self-employed Web developer who lives nearby had been keeping an eye on the storefront throughout the morning and admitted to feeling a little sheepish about coming out first. "Every time they release a product, the lines get earlier and earlier," Jon Reiling told me. "I don't want to contribute to an excessive amount of waiting."



Undeterred by drizzle, about two dozen people lined up Friday afternoon outside Washington's Dupont Circle AT&T store.

(Credit: Anne Broache)



At an AT&T store in the city center, 22-year-old Jessica Lamb, who just started a job as an intelligence analyst with a federal law enforcement agency that shall not be named, said she couldn't wait to blow her first paycheck--which conveniently arrived today--on the $500+ gadget. "If Steve Jobs told me to give him my right arm, I would probably do it," she said gleefully. She had managed to snag the fourth spot in line even though she said she didn't cut out of work--with her boss's permission, of course--until about 1 p.m. Friday.



This AT&T store in central D.C. had a line around the block just before launch, but it didn't get started until lunchtime on Friday.

(Credit: Anne Broache)



At the five AT&T stores I visited downtown, the lines I encountered never numbered more than 50 or so people, even within a half hour of the launch. But the scene was more than a little different when I descended upon an Apple store in Arlington, Va. At least two hundred people, some with now-folded camp chairs slung on their shoulders, snaked from the store's entrance around the well-manicured outdoor shopping center in which it is situated. About 20 minutes before the store reopened its doors, at least half a dozen video cameras manned by local and international news outlets encircled the entrance.



Cheers and applause greet the opening of the doors at 6 p.m. EST at an Apple store in a Washington suburb.

(Credit: Anne Broache)



The final seconds to launch brought a chanted countdown from the front of the line and sporting event-like cheers of "i-Phone! i-Phone!" Within a few minutes of the doors' reopening, a silver-haired man named Stephen Easley--who did, in fact, set up camp outside the store at around 10 p.m. Thursday to be the first in line--emerged to cheers with a pair of iPhones nestled in special black shopping bags, which he displayed for the photographers.




A bit later, I crossed paths with someone who hadn't just staked out a spot because of unbridled Apple love. Glenn Sparico, an enterprising 25-year-old consultant with a finance degree, said he wasn't content to arrive at 9:30 a.m. Friday to procure his two-iPhone quota. He had also paid $50 each to two guys found through Craigslist. They'd ostensibly agreed to buy two apiece and fork them over to Sparico, leaving him with one to keep and five to list on eBay tonight.




"Tonight's going to be a free-for-all," he said with a grin. He glanced around, perhaps with a tinge of apprehension, to see if he could pick out his line-standers. But when I left him to his gadgets, there was no word yet on whether they had come through or, well, simply run off with the goods.



Source: CNET News.com - Business Tech

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