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Prices Of Unsubsidized iPhone 3G's

Stories of unlocking cell phones has been buzzing around in the news lately. Where commonly the practice of unlocking cellphones involves buying unsubsidized units cheaply, unlocking them, and selling them overseas in large numbers, iPhones are being purchased in an expensive unsubsidized state, and adding more value on top of them.
However, it appears that the iPhone 3G is largely immune to this practice for the cell phone companies that do offer unsubsidized iPhones. The fact is, in places like Massachusetts, taxes are paid on the unsubsidized price of the subsidized iPhones, meaning that the device costs $499 unsubsidized. However, companies are offering it "unsubsidized" and with no commitment for $699, 200 more than the other price. It is believed that this is both to help them turn a profit with no contract, and with people reselling them overseas.
[via TUAW]

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Hmm...
Topup?
India is a land of choice, you buy your handset. You may choose a carrier and a plan that you like, and go mobile. The concept of a n-year contract is something new, and is going to take some getting used to. For instance, most people I know don't find it that difficult to switch from a carrier because it's just the question of a couple of phone calls for a postpaid connection and simply not recharging the balance on the pre-paid card. (and there are a lot of those here!)
The iPhone's coming to India with the only choice here being the carriers: Vodafone and Airtel. And a contract! It be an unattractive option if all you wanted was the phone, and not the carrier. (Airtel's coverage beats Vodafone's by far!)
Cellular operators like Reliance Mobile here in India have tried selling phones under a contract agreement. They'd bundle cheap LG handsets for unbelievable prices and shove them down your throat for a 5-year contract period. The SIM couldn't be removed without breaking the phone into several different pieces. (which defeats the purpose anyway! Unlocked, not unbreakable!)
The question of service was something people never asked before they dived headlong into such deals, and before they knew it, they were hit with billing errors, unresolved queries, and huge bills that arose from cuts on the fine-print at the bottom of the ads that they'd been hooked onto.
Either way, it's all about making money. Cellular companies have invested a lot into the infratstructure, and it's a competitive business. To stay afloat, you have to make money. But to make money, do you have to piss customers off? Isn't there a better way to do things? There's a fine balance that carriers must find, profitability v/s customer satisfaction.
There more to customer satisfaction than just more signal bars. Giving the customer a feeling of having made a good choice is also something that carriers must do. I'd rather feel better about having made a choice of sticking with a carrier that's giving me crappy deal because I want to than feel compelled to be sucked into a carrier that was chosen for me. It's all about the choice.
$699 seems like a BIG price to pay for the choice! I'd rather pay full price on the hardware and also get the freedom of choice. If what is being said here is indeed true, then I have very good reasons to believe that the price of the iPhone where I live in India will be somewhere in the high end of the spectrum, if I know the way Blackberry's and other smartphones are being marketed.
?
Belgium
525 for 8gig
615 for 16gig
with no commitment with any provider