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Unveiled: The 3G iPhone
What other features can you expect?

By Matt Loney

Published: Tuesday 10 June 2008

Steve Jobs unveiled the long-awaited 3G iPhone at the company's World-Wide Developer Conference in San Francisco on Monday with prices starting at $199 for the 8GB storage model.

This is half the price of the original iPhone (which started out at $599). A second model, with 16GB of memory, will sell for $299, said Jobs. Both versions will come in black cases, and the 16GB model will also be available in white.

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Twenty-two countries will get the 3G iPhone first, said Jobs, and they'll all get it at the same time - 11 July.

Steve Jobs took the stage on Monday to spend some time talking about enterprise applications for the iPhone and the importance of these to Apple's strategy, before announcing the 3G iPhone.

Jobs said: "Today we're introducing the iPhone 3G. We've learned so much with the first iPhone," he continued as he showed off the new iPhone, which is thinner at the edges with metal buttons on the side. It's the same screen, with a camera, a flush-headphone jack and improved audio.

Jobs said that when Apple set about figuring out its next challenges, "3G networking, as you might have heard, is that first challenge. Enterprise support is the second, third is third-party application support, fourth is international support... and fifth, as everybody wants an iPhone, but we need to make it more affordable."

Talking about the original launch almost a year ago, Jobs said: "It's widely believed that this is the phone that has changed phones forever." The thing Jobs said he really likes is that users love their iPhones, quoting 90 per cent customer satisfaction numbers.

Ninety-eight per cent of iPhone users are browsing, and 80 per cent are using 10 or more features, he said, quoting sales of six million units to date.

Jobs compared the 3G iPhone to the Nokia N95 and Treo 750 - two other 3G phones - and said the 3G iPhone is faster to download the same web page. He said the 3G iPhone has 300 hours of standby time, improved talktime from eight hours to 10 hours on 2G talk time, and five hours of 3G talk time. Browsing should give five to six hours, video seven hours, and audio 24 hours of battery life, he said. Additional reporting by CNET News.com's Tom Krazit


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