Why 40% iPhone Discount Is Bad For Apple

As it stated in So, when when Google included a feature to destroy telemarketers and short-circuit robocalls (figuratively, of course) on the Pixel 3, many of us were excited--even those who use iPhones. It seemed obvious then that Apple would probably follow suit quickly, and replicate the feature. At least then you can screen calls (although you get a voice recording rather than a text, which is less convenient). At the very least, it seems that Apple could easily allow you to be alerted to incoming calls by banner rather than fullscreen, without having to jailbreak. But these are the companies charging $1,000 for a phone; they're teamed up with data service providers charging hundreds every month to use them.


How to set up eSIM on the Apple iPhone XR and XS

However, Apple has now made it possible for owners of an iPhone XR, iPhone XS, or iPhone XS Max to add a second line of service by using an eSIM (or digital SIM), bypassing the need for a physical SIM card. Once you've purchased the eSIM plan, you'll want to set up your phone for dual SIMs. Go to Settings, Cellular, and Add Cellular Plan. If you want to switch to the data plan you're using, go to your Cellular menu, choose Cellular Data and then select Cellular Data Switching. On your iPhone, go to Settings, Cellular, and Add Cellular Plan, and then scan the QR code from the email so you can do the final account setup.

How to set up eSIM on the Apple iPhone XR and XS

Why 40% iPhone Discount Is Bad For Apple

as declared in But a Bloomberg report that Apple is offering a 40% discount on the iPhone XR is either a great way to get rid of excess inventory and boost the potential installed based for Apple's services or the end of Apple as we've known it. And if Apple can clear its iPhone XR inventory through those price cuts, it might get some new Apple customers who will buy more services. In fiscal 2017, Apple generated about $141 billion in iPhone sales and nearly $30 billion in services revenue -- up 3% and 23%, respectively from the year before. If those growth rates continue unchanged, by 2026, services will surpass iPhone sales -- with $193 billion to $184 billion in 2026 revenues, respectively. However, if iPhone sales decline at a 6% annual rate -- as the Wall Street Journal suggested they have been -- then the services revenue needed to pick up the slack from falling iPhone revenue would be a whopping $1,556 per new iPhone sold.

2018's Biggest Apple Leaks: iPhone XS and XR, iPad Pro, Macs, and More

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2018's Biggest Apple Leaks: iPhone XS and XR, iPad Pro, Macs, and More




collected by :Clara William

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