
Evidence continues to mount to support expectations that Apple’s iPhone 4 will
finally launch on Verizon this coming January. The latest: Sources close
to Apple’s hardware suppliers say that Apple has ordered millions of
CDMA chipsets from Qualcomm. CDMA is the wireless technology used by
Verizon.
The report comes from TechCrunch contributor Steve Cheney, who says that the chipsets
are due in December, implying a January launch for the Verizon device.
This follows a rumor from seven months ago that Qualcomm had landed a deal to provide Apple with chips.
You might also recall that AT&T dedicated a significant portion of its
recent SEC filing to assurances that it would be a-okay without U.S. iPhone exclusivity, a probable sign that the carrier is expecting to lose said exclusivity before the original 5-year deal runs its course.
TechCrunch doesn’t disclose any details about its sources for this rumor; it
describes them only as “sources with knowledge of this entire
situation,” a reference to the long chain of manufacturers from Apple on
down through Qualcomm and other component-makers.
The January release date was supported by an earlier, less-specific report from Bloomberg about a coming Verizon iPhone. Some surveys have predicted that as many as half of Verizon’s current customers will abandon their current phones for the iPhone if it becomes available to them.
If this rumor pans out, will you be abandoning your current Verizon phone
for an iPhone. Or if you’re an existing iPhone customer, will you drop
AT&T and make the move to Verizon when it gets the iPhone?