Skip to main content

iPhone Not On UK Xmas Lists

iPhone Not On UK Xmas ListsThe iPhone might have had a spectacular launch in Britain recently, but a survey by GfK NOP indicates that it might not have a lot of legs following the initialrush.   Only 2% of respondents said they were likely to add an iPhone to their Christmas lists, while 46% felt the price of the phone – around $400 – was too high. However, peoplewere definitely aware of the handset, with 78% associating it with music, and 65% with e-mail and web surfing.   Part of the problem is that UK mobile operators traditional provide free handsetsfor contract customers, while O2, which has the franchise for Britain, doesn’t do that with the iPhone.   GfK NOP’s Richard Jameson said,   "Apple’s history provesthat it has the magic touch when it comes to product development and marketing, however the iPhone has yet to capture the imagination of the UK public. iPhone hype is in full-force, but our datashows that it is very much a considered purchase, with its high price turning many consumers off…This is a highly competitive market and the mobile phone manufacturers have very strong brandloyalty.  Apple needs more than cutting–edge design to penetrate this market and will have to work much harder in the UK than it did in the US to make iPhone a mass-marketproposition.”    

Digital Trends Staff
Digital Trends has a simple mission: to help readers easily understand how tech affects the way they live. We are your…
The iPhone 17 may get one of the biggest design changes in five years
never mind the vision pro these were 6 best apple products of year iphone 16 review

The iPhone has had a distinctive look since its initial release in 2007. Sure, the sizes have changed, as have materials, but you can generally glance at an iPhone of any generation and say, "Yeah, that's an iPhone." Now, a rumor suggests that the iPhone 17 could draw inspiration from its predecessors and bring back the curved edges that have appeared several times throughout the generations.

Leaker Fixed-Focus Digital shared on Weibo (a Chinese social media platform) that the iPhone 17 would reintroduce the rounded sides of the first few iPhones, doing away with the straight edges current models have. Some fans find the straight sides less comfortable to hold, although a case can make a big difference in how the phone feels in your hand. Fixed-Focus Digital doesn't share further details, but Apple tends to differentiate its premium lineup from the base models. The design change could apply only to the base versions of the iPhone 17, to only the Pro and Pro Max versions, or to every version.

Read more
TCL is finally launching a phone in the U.S. with its unique Nxtpaper display
TCL 60 XE Nxtpaper 5G display

If you’ve ever wanted a smartphone with a display that isn't uncomfortable to look at for extended periods, then good news! TCL has announced the TCL 60 XE Nxtpaper 5G at CES 2025, and while this is not the first Nxtpaper phone, it is the first one to launch in the U.S., which is a big deal.

For those who haven’t seen a Nxtpaper device, TCL’s innovative display technology blends advanced screen capabilities with digital health and comfort. Handsets like the TCL 50 Pro Nxtpaper 5G have previously offered Nxtpaper tech on smartphones, but now this advanced display tech is coming to North America for the first time, allowing consumers in the U.S. to experience a display that protects their eyes from the harsh effects of blue light and glare during extended viewing periods.

Read more
Low iPad Pro demand could push an OLED iPad Air to 2027
A video playing on the Apple iPad Air (2024).

If you have patiently waited for Apple to release an iPad Air with an OLED, we have bad news. LG Display is adjusting its OLED production away from the iPad Pro because of weak demand. According to The Elec (via MacRumors), production is shifting to manufacturing iPhone displays, which could delay the launch of the world's first iPad Air with OLED.

According to the report, LG Display hopes to maintain its current production of iPad OLED inventory until the end of February. By then, it hopes Apple will give it the go-ahead to shift production to OLED iPhone panels.

Read more