iPhone selling well in France, Orange chief says

21 Jan 2008
00:00

(Associated Press via NewsEdge) Sales in France of the much-hyped Apple iPhone after the holiday season are going better than mobile carrier Orange expected, Didier Lombard, head of Orange parent France Telecom, said.

'We thought it would slow at the beginning of the year but we were wrong,' he told The Associated Press during a gathering at the Elysee Palace after a speech by French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Lombard said that sales are going 'very well,' but declined to provide figures due to the blackout period ahead of the announcement of France Telecom's full year results February 6.

Orange said December 5 that it had sold 30,000 iPhones in the five days after it went on sale in France. Lombard had previously said he hopes to sell as many as 100,000 of the handsets by the end of 2007.

The iPhone combines a mobile phone with an iPod media player and can wirelessly access the internet.

In a challenge to Apple's strategy thus far to offer its iPhone through an exclusive mobile operator for each region, Orange is selling unlocked handsets to comply with French consumer law.

Orange has sold 'very, very few' iPhones without a contract, Lombard said.

© 2008 The Associated Press

© 2008 Dialog, a Thomson business. All rights reserved

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