Apple Inc on Tuesday launched four versions of the iPhone 12 with faster 5G connectivity, starting at $699, which the Cupertino, California company hopes will spur a wave of upgrades and keep its sales booming through the end of the year.
The iPhone 12, with a 6.1-inch display, will sell for $799.
The phone has flat sides with a flush display, similar to the company's iPhone 5 and a departure from rounded edges in recent years.


Apple's HomePod mini is seen with an iPhone

Apple also introduced a "Mini" version, which has the same features but a smaller 5.4-inch screen and will sell for $699, as well as a "Pro" version with three cameras starting at $999 and a "Pro Max" starting at $1,099 and going up to $1,399.
"Today is the beginning of a new era for iPhone," Apple chief executive Tim Cook said during a streamed launch event from the company's headquarters in California.
"This is a huge moment for all of us. And we're really excited.
"5G will bring a new level of performance for downloads and uploads, higher quality video streaming, more responsive gaming, real time interactivity and so much more."
The new handsets offer improvements to the camera system and a redesign that adds more display with a smaller overall size.
The new products will test whether Apple can ride a wave of consumer excitement around 5G wireless data networks, whose speediest variants outstrip their predecessors' data rates multiple times over.
Apple said all iPhone 12 models in the United States will support millimeter wave 5G, the fastest variant of the technology, as well as lower-frequency bands.
Some rival Android devices support only the lower-frequency versions of 5G.
Verizon Communications Inc CEO Hans Vestberg said the phones would work with the carrier's 'ultrawideband' 5G network, designed to alleviate bottlenecks in major cities like New York and Los Angeles, as well as in crowded areas like NFL stadiums.
Apple said it had tested 5G on more than 800 carriers in 30 regions globally.
Apple joins other handset makers including Samsung and Huawei in introducing smartphones taking advantage of the growing 5G footprint around the world, which could open up new markets and technologies.
5G networks are touted as promising an exponential leap in the amount and speed of wireless data, enabling advances in self-driving vehicles, virtual reality, connected health and more as sensors and servers communicate instantly.
"Apple drives a lot of technology shifts in the industry, and the iPhone 12 supports 5G in all its forms on four different phones," said Avi Greengart, analyst with Techsponential.
Apple may face a lukewarm holiday season due to the coronavirus pandemic, said Jake Dollarhide, chief executive officer of Longbow Asset Management in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
"As the convergence of flu season with Covid and colder weather forces everyone indoors, I think it's going to be harder to sell iPhones this Christmas.
As much as Apple is a technology company, it's not known for its online sales, it's known for its in-store experience," Dollarhide said.
In China, the biggest online video platforms, including Tencent Holdings and Bilibili Inc, canceled Apple's livestream event without explanation, Bloomberg News reported.
Pre-orders for the iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 Pro in the United States and some other regions begin Oct. 16 and go on sale Oct. 23.
The iPhone Mini and Pro Max will be available for pre-order Nov. 6 and in stores Nov. 13.
Apple also announced a HomePod Mini smart speaker that will cost $99 and be shipped from Nov.16.
Many of the features serve as a catch-up to similar offerings from Amazon.com Inc and Alphabet Inc's Google.
The annual launch event is nearly one month later than normal and comes as the coronavirus pandemic has disrupted Apple's well-oiled machine for designing and churning out its biggest-selling product.
The company is in a delicate position of needing to excite consumers with 5G without setting them up for a disappointment: For many of its fans, it will be their first experience with 5G networks, which in the United States remain years away from delivering dramatic speed boosts for most consumers.
Some analysts worry Apple will be selling a high-powered sports car while its customers remain confined to sleepy village roadways.
But despite waves of retail store closures and travel bans that delayed the development of the iPhone, Apple's financial results have largely bucked the pandemic.
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