Apple has received a record number of pre-orders for the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus, both of which are set to be released in eight countries, including the UK, on Friday 19 September.
The Cupertino-based company says four million orders were placed within the first 24 hours with demand exceeding initial supply. It says a “significant amount” will be delivered on Friday and throughout the rest of September, but adds some will not get their new handset until October.
Additional stock will be available at Apple Stores from 08:00 on Friday, a relief to those who have been queuing up outside for some time now, and devices will also be available from authorised retailers and operators, including EE, O2, Vodafone and Three.
The company has also confirmed that both smartphones will be available in 20 additional territories from 26 September, including Ireland and the Isle of Man.
The four million pre-orders the company claims to have received is double the two million it received for the iPhone 5, which was double that of the iPhone 4S a year earlier. Apple did not accept pre-orders for the iPhone 5S last year and instead only entertained advance purchases of the cheaper iPhone 5C.
The 4.7-inch iPhone 6 and 5.5 inch iPhone 6 Plus were announced by the firm last week. Both feature Near Field Communication (NFC) technology, retina HD displays, a more powerful A8 processor and improved camera functionality, while they are both compatible with the Apple Watch which also made its debut in California.
What do you know about the iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus and Apple Watch?
Group of TikTok creators in the United States attempt to block recent law that will…
Hundreds of climate activists clashed with police outside Tesla gigafactory near Berlin, in protest over…
AI very much the focus at Google's annual developer conference, including Google Gemini and a…
Co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever to leave OpenAI, after role in Sam Altman's firing…
Electric vehicles made in China are now subject to a 100 percent tariff, to protect…
Microsoft faces formal EU antitrust charges over videoconferencing app Teams after concessions to European Commission…