>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / TECH / STORY
iPhone's debut in S. Korea means paradigm shift
Sat, Nov 28, 2009
AFP

by Park Chan-Kyong

SEOUL - Apple's top selling iPhone made its debut in South Korea Saturday with experts saying the iconic smartphone is likely to serve as a wake-up call for an IT industry basking in an isolated market.

Hundreds of people lined up overnight outside the Olympic stadium in Seoul to pick up their iPhone as soon as it was launched.

The Internet and multimedia enabled iPhone immediately emerged as the country's most popular smartphone with nearly 60,000 people making online pre-sale orders, according to KT Corp, local distributor of iPhone.

KT Corp, South Korea's second largest mobile carrier, said its deal with Apple will dent the dominance of rival SK Telecom, which has a 50.5 per cent share of the local mobile market compared with KT's 31 per cent.

KT set the price of the 32-gigabyte iPhone 3GS at 396,000 won (S$435) for customers who subscribe with a monthly service fee of 45,000 won. The price is 264,000 won for customers who subscribe with a monthly fee of 65,000 won.

The introduction of the smartphone with its vast range of applications sparked immediate price competition.

Samsung Electronics, one of the world's largest mobile makers, slashed the cost of its most advanced and expensive phone, an eight-gigabyte touch-screen model called Omnia2, by 44,000 won to 924,000 won.

The iPhone has proved to be a massive hit in markets such as the United States and Europe but ran into problems before launching in South Korea due to concerns that location services such as "Google Maps" would breach a privacy law.

Its sale was finally approved in September by telecom regulators who said such services would not encroach on privacy.

South Korean firms have grown under the protection of high trade barriers, which have helped Samsung and LG become the world's second and third largest handset makers.

But local customers pay the highest prices in the world for mobile phones and among the highest for wireless service.

Hongsun Kim of Ahnlab, South Korea's top IT anti-virus and security solution provider, welcomed iPhone's debut in the country, which he said would bring about a "paradigm shift" toward mobile applications and contents.

"iPhone's philosophy is centred on various applications and contents. Mobile telecommunication is just a part of its software," he wrote on his company's website.

"The key word in IT is global openness but as many bloggers point out, South Korea is becoming like the Galapagos Islands of IT," he said in reference to the country's closed IT market.

"There is no country in the world like South Korea which claims itself as an IT powerhouse. But it is not a right direction for us to lock ourselves in and get satisfied with our own achievement," he said.

 
 
STORY INDEX
 
  iPhone's debut in S. Korea means paradigm shift
   
 
  French minister wants Europe to take on Google
   
 
  Space shuttle Atlantis lands back on Earth
   
 
  More tech fair fever at SITEX
   
 
  Videogames help solve crimes
   
 
  Half of Euro online travel purchases legally unsafe: EU
   
 
  USSR meets YouTube in Russian web nostalgia project
   
 
  Acer says Windows 7 good for sales
   
 
  Italian prosecutors seek jail for Google execs
   
 
  Asian firms go big on Twitter and Facebook
   
>> RELATED STORY
iPhone as tool for school outings
SingTel shareholders query iPhone and F1
8G iPhone at $398
Only 9, but he's written iPhone app
Apple wins patent

Elsewhere in AsiaOne...

Motoring: Belkin TuneBase Direct with Hands-Free (F8Z442qe)

Digital: Mobile web surge continues in October

Business: 'Leadership position' helped SingTel snag iPhone contract

 

We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
Search AsiaOne: