Apple delays entry MacBook Air till after Thanksgiving
Apple is apologizing to customers this week who had placed orders for its new entry-level NVIDIA-based MacBook Airs, explaining that due to an unforeseen issue, it's unlikely to deliver those systems until shortly after the Thanksgiving holiday.
"Due to an unexpected delay, we are unable to ship your MacBook Air by the date
originally quoted to you," the company said in an email to several online store customers who were previously quoted ship times of November 5th and a delivery estimate of November 10th. "We now anticipate shipping the item by 11/24/08 and delivering by 11/29/08."
Apple apologized for the inconvenience and said customers may change or cancel their order anytime time before it's shipped.
The delay only appears to be affecting the entry-level 1.6GHz model with a 120GB SATA hard drive. The company has been actively shipping the 1.86GHz model with 128GB solid-state drive since late last month, will several customer orders arriving about a week earlier than anticipate.
A quick investigation into the matter reveals the hold-up is a direct result of either component or supply chain issues surrounding the 1.6GHz model's standard 120GB SATA hard drive.
The Apple Online Store is reflecting lead times of only 3 - 5 days for the 1.86GHz model with its built-in solid state drive, but 2 - 3 weeks for the 1.6GHz Air with standard hard disk drive. However, selecting a 1.6GHz model and choosing the$500.00 upgrade to a 128GB Solid State Drive drops the lead time from 2 - 3 weeks to 3 - 5 days, essentially isolating hard drive as the source of the delay.
Unfortunately, the MacBook Air isn't the only Apple notebook whose shipments are being delayed due to hard drive components. AppleInsider readers note that the $50 option to upgrade the new MacBook Pro's hard drive to a 320GB Serial ATA @ 7200 increases lead times from 1 - 3 days to 5 to 7 days.
"Due to an unexpected delay, we are unable to ship your MacBook Air by the date
originally quoted to you," the company said in an email to several online store customers who were previously quoted ship times of November 5th and a delivery estimate of November 10th. "We now anticipate shipping the item by 11/24/08 and delivering by 11/29/08."
Apple apologized for the inconvenience and said customers may change or cancel their order anytime time before it's shipped.
The delay only appears to be affecting the entry-level 1.6GHz model with a 120GB SATA hard drive. The company has been actively shipping the 1.86GHz model with 128GB solid-state drive since late last month, will several customer orders arriving about a week earlier than anticipate.
A quick investigation into the matter reveals the hold-up is a direct result of either component or supply chain issues surrounding the 1.6GHz model's standard 120GB SATA hard drive.
The Apple Online Store is reflecting lead times of only 3 - 5 days for the 1.86GHz model with its built-in solid state drive, but 2 - 3 weeks for the 1.6GHz Air with standard hard disk drive. However, selecting a 1.6GHz model and choosing the$500.00 upgrade to a 128GB Solid State Drive drops the lead time from 2 - 3 weeks to 3 - 5 days, essentially isolating hard drive as the source of the delay.
Unfortunately, the MacBook Air isn't the only Apple notebook whose shipments are being delayed due to hard drive components. AppleInsider readers note that the $50 option to upgrade the new MacBook Pro's hard drive to a 320GB Serial ATA @ 7200 increases lead times from 1 - 3 days to 5 to 7 days.
Comments
<Bada-bump>
Thank you. Thank you. Shows at 9 and 11, folks.
I guess they want to make sure that they don't lay a turkey with this new MacBook Air.
<Bada-bump>
Thank you. Thank you. Shows at 9 and 11, folks.
I guess it's funny that you don't know that the saying is "lay an egg"?
I'm not saying the iPhone will sell as if the economy was normal. It won't. But it is a hugely compelling product thanks to the app store. It went from a nice phone with an iPod to a portable computer with GPS. We've only begun to see the potential of this thing.
AAPL should be fine so long as Steve is in good health.
Fadell, weak iPhone demand, no pre Xmas updates, the trackpad glitch, lawsuits -- not a good news week for AAPL.
Aren't you overstating some of these things? I mean WTF.
that makes sense, I just ordered a $2499 15" MBP with a 250GB hard drive instead of the 320GB (I already have a 320 7200 RPM anyways) and it knocked my order to 3-5 days shipping... Now I gotta wait two extra days...
I think Apple in general have pushed back estimated shipping dates.
My CTO MBA was supposed to be shipped today (1.60GHz/128GB SSD) and that's been knocked back to 3-5 business days. The computer can't come soon enough, been needing a laptop to carry around for a long time, can't get a lot of work done without it.
Aren't you overstating some of these things? I mean WTF.
I'm simply recapping the news. I don't even know how accurate it is. The USB analyst has a terrible track record. But it IS bad news. That's what I'm commenting on.
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2008/...up-due-to.html
http://www.fundmymutualfund.com/2008...reek-debt.html
Apple is apologizing to customers this week ...
Where's the apology ?
I haven't heard anything from Apple.