Apple's iPhone 6 launch in China reportedly delayed by regulatory setbacks
Apple won't be able to release the iPhone 6 and the iPhone Plus in China on the devices' initial launch day.
Apple won't be able to release the iPhone 6 and the iPhone Plus in China on the devices' initial launch day.
This week, China and stolen iPhone handsets feature in our AppAdvice International column.
China Telecom has launched a preorder campaign for the yet to be announced "iPhone 6."
Apple has started storing the iCloud data of its users in China on the data centers of the state-owned China Telecom.
China's smartphone market is continuing to increase, and Apple is set to benefit from this in 2014.
This week we're discussing Steve Wozniak in China, 4G LTE in the Channel Tunnel, and a new Apple Retail Store in Brisbane, Australia.
China Telecom is hoping its impressive iPhone deals will encourage customers to choose its network over China Mobile's.
It looks like preorders for the iPhone with China Mobile aren't as high as we'd all expected.
China's smartphone market could be cooling, and if so, this doesn't bode so well for iPhone sales.
Apple's iPhones are already selling incredibly well in China.
Preorders for Apple's iPhone 5s and iPhone 5c have recently passed 100,000 units with China Unicom.
Apple's iPhone has gained regulatory approval in China with China Mobile's wireless standard.
Apple's iPhone 5 should be with China Telecom by early December, at the latest.
China Telecom could get Apple's iPhone 5 in December, or even earlier.
Apple's upcoming iPhone could be the world's first truly global cellular handset.
China Telecom officially launched the iPhone 4S on Friday, having taken a massive 200,000 pre-orders for the long-awaited handset.
China Telecom has recently confirmed (via its website) that the network will carry Apple's iPhone 4S from March 9.
It has recently been announced that China Telecom will carry a CDMA version of the iPhone 4S from either the end of February, or the beginning of March.
A new report from The Wall Street Journal suggests that Apple might have built a modified iPhone that is compatible with China Telecom’s network.
China Telecom Corp Ltd will soon be offering its 106 million subscribers access to the iPhone for the first time, according to news first reported exclusively by Reuters. The news, which comes just weeks after Apple COO Tim Cook’s recent visit to China, means that two of the country’s three carriers will now offer the popular handset.