Samsung's Application Store scrambles to life for some Omnia i900 owners
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Boost's clearly (and understandably) delighted by the explosive popularity of its $50 unlimited package, but the scrappy little division of Sprint still needs to grow into the big shoes it's now fashioned for itself -- and it looks like that's what 2009 is going to be all about. Boost chief Matt Carter has revealed that the brand will be opening some 50 new retail outlets before the end of the year, all of which will be dedicated to peddling Boost goods rather than occupying a lame little kiosk in the corner of a Sprint store. That's in addition to the three dedicated stores Boost currently operates in Miami, LA, and Houston, so it's a pretty big step up -- and with subscriber adds continuing to pile up amid newly-heated competition with arch rivals like Virgin, there probably couldn't be a better time to step up.
If you're a non-T-Mobile customer jonesing for a G1 and you don't mind the prospect of waiting in a line of epic, new video game console proportions, head on out to San Francisco today where T-Mob's corporate location at 3rd and Market will become the first store anywhere to offer the G1 to the general public starting at 6PM. That's a full fourteen hours earlier than the rest of the country; the remainder of T-Mobile's stores in 3G markets will start pushing Android out the door at 8AM Wednesday morning. So, how crazy are you? Book those flights, people -- time's running out!
It's not as crisis-inducing as the Starbucks outage earlier this week may have been for some of us, but there's another store closing happening today that we need to be monitoring pretty closely: we've heard that Sprint will be closing every last one of its locations -- even licensed dealers -- from 9AM to 11AM PST for some sort of webcast. Rumor has it Sprint's baristas will be given a refresher course on how to pull the perfect shot of espresso, but if it turns out to be something else, we'll let you know.
The latest of eight stores now open globally, Nokia has officially unveiled its London flagship retail spot at 240 Regent Street (Hong Kong pictured). The location could very well end up being the crown jewel in Nokia's direct retail strategy, lying within earshot of Apple's impressive London location at 235 Regent Street and covering two full stories of consumer space. As we've seen in the other spots, LCDs and color-changing walls cover the perimeter, while the floors and ceilings are clad with rich woods. A separate "Product Zone," "Solutions Zone," and "Retail Zone" all guide shoppers to different areas of the store depending on their needs, while a dedicated Vertu lounge lets the nouveau riche do their thing in privacy. If anyone has a chance to check out the digs this weekend, be sure to send us some impressions!
Not to say that the market for unlocked iPhones is quite as white hot as it once was, but Apple's now willing to part with as many as five iPhones per customer, up from the draconian two imposed back in October. The limit had been imposed to put the kibosh on rampant unlocking and selling of iPhones on the secondary market -- particularly abroad -- and Apple must figure that Europeans with a hankering for some Cupertino kit are more likely now to turn to their official domestic options to get hooked up. Of course, supply is probably more plentiful now than it ever has been, too, but whatever -- the point is that Apple's more than happy to take your 2 large in exchange for 5 iPhones if you're so inclined.







