With the much-hyped iPhone just days away from release, individuals hoping to
make a quick buck on the device have turned to online bulletin boards such as
Craigslist
to offer their 'services'.
A self-described
'expert
line-stander' from New York offered to queue up from Thursday afternoon
until 4pm Friday for a fee of $1,000, iPhone not included. In most cases, the
price of 'queuing services' ranged from $175 to $250.
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Apple
chief executive Steve Jobs said at the
Worldwide
Developers Conference earlier this month that the iPhone would go on sale in
the US at 6pm local time on 29 June, but the company has yet to reveal the exact
details of the launch.
While the price of the device has been disclosed ($499 for the 4GB version,
and $599 for the 8GB),
AT&T, the
exclusive operator of the iPhone, has yet to reveal the terms and conditions of
the two-year plan to which buyers must sign up.
It is not clear whether the 'queuing services' have encountered much demand.
Ads from 'line-waiters' were vastly outnumbered by ads from those looking for a
guaranteed shot at an iPhone.
One
prospective
buyer from New York, who was offering $75 for someone to wait in line, said:
"Nobody is going to pay someone $250 for an already expensive phone! Get real
folks!"
A
desperate
iPhone seeker from San José, California could not pay extra for someone to
queue up, but did offer "something of mine like my stereo system from my car or
something".
Pre-release hype for the iPhone was at its strongest on the New York and
Silicon Valley versions of Craigslist, where dozens of queuing offers could be
found.
In Seattle, home to Apple arch-rival
Microsoft,
the Craigslist market for the iPhone was decidedly more tepid. Just two Seattle
posters were offering their queuing services, and nobody had made a post
offering to purchase the device.
There are currently no listings for any iPhones on
eBay. The
auction website requires sellers to own the goods that they offer for sale, and
removes all auctions for items that do not meet its guidelines as a matter of
policy.
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