Las Vegas Review-Journal

Iphone shoppers wait (less)

Apple fans show up, find shorter lines

- By Subrina Hudson Las Vegas Review-journal

Apple Store employees gave a standing ovation as customers who were eager to get their hands on the latest iphone entered the Downtown Summerlin shop early Friday.

Shoppers were lined up outside the store by 7 a.m. to await the store’s 8 a.m. opening, which marked the global launch of Apple’s iphone 11 and other new products.

The lines — one for walk-in

customers and a second for reservatio­ns — were fairly short at first compared with previous years, but by the time the glass doors opened at 8 a.m., the line was about to wrap around the building.

Bledar Kodra, who has owned an iphone since its first release in 2007, was one of the first customers when he arrived at about 7 a.m. and was surprised he could snag a spot near the front of the line.

“I’ve never seen a short line,” Kodra said. “Oh my gosh, before it would wrap around the building. Last year, I ordered (the iphone), and it came to my house.”

Cupertino, California-based Apple can always count on die-hard fans to wait in line every September, but the hype has appeared to wane this year as iphone sales have underperfo­rmed.

For the quarter that ended July 30, the company reported a 12 percent decrease in iphone sales to $26 billion and said revenue growth was being fueled by services such as Apple Music, wearables, and ipad and Mac sales.

Quarterly revenue rose 1 percent from a year earlier to $53.8 billion.

Ben Arnet said he had been planning to visit the store Friday to replace a broken iphone but realized Thursday night that a new phone was launching the next morning.

“I had to look at the times the store opened on my girlfriend’s phone and it said special hours and I said that’s got to mean they’re launching something,” said Arnet, who planned to get Apple’s top-ofthe-line iphone 11 Pro Max.

The president of Las Vegas-based LED cannabis grow lighting company Fohse Inc. said his entire business is run from his phone, so he showed up early to try and beat the line — on his birthday — before heading into the office.

New look

Apple launched the iphone 11, iphone 11 Pro and iphone 11 Pro Max with prices from $699 up to $1,099 and its Apple Watch Series 5, which starts at $399.

Fans didn’t see drastic changes to the phone’s design, but the models come with several upgrades, including a triple camera system on the Pro models, while the iphone 11 comes equipped with a wide and ultra-wide lens.

Other features introduced include a new night mode, a longer battery life and an updated processor, which Apple touts as “the fastest ever chip in a smartphone.”

Fabian Hernandez, who arrived at Downtown Summerlin with two colleagues, said this year’s release is “nothing really to write home about, other than the cameras.”

While Hernandez had a more subdued outlook on the iphone, he was interested in the Nov. 1 launch of Apple TV+, a streaming video service at $4.99 per month, which pits Apple against the likes of Netflix and Hulu.

“I’m excited for that,” Hernandez said.

Customers who buy any iphone, ipad, Apple TV, ipod or Mac will receive a free one-year subscripti­on to Apple TV+.

Hernandez said he probably will sign up after the free trial ends.

“All I do is Netflix and Youtube TV. I don’t have any cable or anything, so if it has good content, I’m in,” he said.

Full suite

Kenni Vogrich came prepared. The Las Vegas resident made an appointmen­t online to pick up the iphone 11 Pro Max in midnight green and the Apple Watch 5.

“I knew what I wanted after I watched the keynote,” she said. “I’m excited. It’s a lifestyle.”

Vogrich said that for her, it’s not merely a phone or a watch. The devices, which offer features such as fall detection, Facetiming and heart rate monitoring, are important for her health, since she has “a heart valve thing,” she said.

“It’s expensive, but it’s worth it in my opinion.”

But Vogrich said it’s not worth waiting in line, pointing to the line of customers without appointmen­ts, because Apple allows shoppers to preorder products to be shipped to their home or to make in-store appointmen­ts.

“They made it so much easier,” she said. “You make these appointmen­ts, and you get a 30-minute window. I showed up at 8:10 a.m., and I’ll be in there probably by 8:20 a.m.”

Contact Subrina Hudson at shudson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-3830340. Follow @Subrinah on Twitter.

 ?? Elizabeth Page Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal @Elipagepho­to ?? Andrew Young, left, congratula­tes Bledar Kodra after he purchased an iphone 11 on Friday during the product’s launch event at the Apple Store at Downtown Summerlin.
Elizabeth Page Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal @Elipagepho­to Andrew Young, left, congratula­tes Bledar Kodra after he purchased an iphone 11 on Friday during the product’s launch event at the Apple Store at Downtown Summerlin.
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 ??  ?? People wait Friday for the iphone 11 release at the Apple Store at Downtown Summerlin.
People wait Friday for the iphone 11 release at the Apple Store at Downtown Summerlin.

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