It wouldn't be September without a late
night spent hitting refresh on your browser window trying to buy the new
iPhone. And so here we are again, as preorders are now live on Apple's site.
You can also preorder online with AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, or T-Mobile
(who makes you call in, which is insane) and with shipments beginning on
September 25th. As of this writing, you can't grab your new phone from Apple's
website, which doesn't have a preorder option yet. An even better idea, as my
colleague Chris Ziegler points out, to do so through the Apple Store iOS app.
The app is known to be more reliable than the website, which around now is
being crushed by a mountain of traffic.
If you do use the Apple Store app, know
that there may be a bit of wonkiness involved. Earlier today, Apple's site actually
experienced a brief period of down time, and the store app also wasn't working.
Before that, a "Get ready to pre-order the iPhone 6S" prompt within
the app let you fill out your carrier settings and choose the device you want
so when preorders are available, you only have a few buttons to press. Yet for
some users, myself included, the pricing screen would only display one option,
like the choice to use AT&T's Next financing plan or the option to only buy
the device off-contract. It didn't appear to display more than one purchase
option, so be sure to double check.
For those who want to enroll in Apple's
iPhone Upgrade Program, arguably one of the better deals around, you'll have to
poke around the Apple Store app. Go to the "shopping" section, select
iPhone, and then scroll to the bottom of the list. It's there below
"accessories," and will let you reserve the model of your choice and
schedule a retail store appointment to pick it up.
The Apple Store app is the way to go
This year, Apple threw a bit of a
curveball and moved the date from the standard Friday morning to Saturday,
meaning poor East Coast residents eager to buy the iPhone 6S or 6S Plus are
sitting here at 3:01AM. It's bittersweet because not having to work the next
day makes the buying process notably less obnoxious, but having to sit at your
computer or pull out your phone in the middle of the night is not a great way
to kick off the weekend.
As far as prices go, Apple's iPhone 6S
will cost you $649 (16GB), $749 (64GB), or $849 (128GB). For the iPhone 6S
Plus, you'll have to plunk down an additional $100 over the cost of the 6S for
whichever storage tier you want. AppleCare+ phone insurance and support now
runs an additional $129, a $30 bump over last year. These prices may be a shock
to those that are still accustomed to cellular carriers' two-year contracts and
the $200 iPhone of years past. Yet most major telecom companies including
AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon have begun following
T-Mobile's lead and dropping support for these types of deals. Two-year
contracts hurt customers in the long run and carriers have discovered that they
also limit customers' ability to upgrade whenever they like.
You can still get your hands on a two-year
deal with certain carriers if you buy it from the company itself, like
AT&T, but you'll save more money by picking up a month-by-month financing
option like AT&T Next or Apple's iPhone Upgrade Program.
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