Core explains iPod pricing

BeVonk!

Executive Member
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May 12, 2006
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8,524
Who needs a dealers price list when you have Amazon at your fingertips :D

Last time I tried Amazon wouldn't ship electronics to SA ... has this policy changed ... or do you imply other methods for bringing the purchased goods over?
 

bwana

MyBroadband
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Last time I tried Amazon wouldn't ship electronics to SA ... has this policy changed ... or do you imply other methods for bringing the purchased goods over?
I use a re-mailing service called Dad.
 

Necuno

Court Jester
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Sep 27, 2005
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cheapest option there for RSA is regual shipping and single mail box :

±R105 setup fee, R140 p/m which includes 1 shipment of 4 pounds to RSA.

additional shipments of starting at 1 pound @ R111.92
additional extra pounds to one of the above @ R70.00

which has further restrictions on the package size of 9.5" x 12.5" - larger more costs....
 

Necuno

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I am on the bronse with has a setup fee but no monthly fee.

but then you pay $ 39.95 per shipping (1 pound) and $ 8.55 per extra pound as where one shipping is included in the monthly rental of
$ 19.90 weighing 4 pound and $ 9.99 per extra pound.

according to their rates page......
 

Abe

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4,610
but then you pay $ 39.95 per shipping (1 pound) and $ 8.55 per extra pound as where one shipping is included in the monthly rental of
$ 19.90 weighing 4 pound and $ 9.99 per extra pound.

according to their rates page......

Yes. It depends on how many shipments you expect per year/month. Whats nice is that they will repack the stuff for you and remove manuals etc which cuts back the weight. I suppose it depends what you use it for. Something like an iPod shuffle would have a weight of next to nothing. A iMac would be a different kettle of fish but then again, for an iMac, it would probably be cheaper to jump on a flight to the US and pick one up then have it posted :(

I use it for software purchases which have different pricing for different countries but one can also use it for iTunes purchases etc and the odd package.
 

jveldsman

Member
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Jun 5, 2006
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Ipods Still Toooo Expensive

please look at this table.. this says everything... and the research differs to the "research" that Core came up with:


iPod cheap in Hong Kong, but a Brazil bank-breaker

Tags: Reuters, Consumer electronics, U.S., Apple iPod, Australia, Hong Kong, Apple iPod Nano, Apple Inc., Digital Music, Digital Media, Personal Technology
In the market for a new video iPod? Head to Hong Kong or, if Europe-bound, stop off in Switzerland. But best avoid Brazil.

One of Australia's biggest banks, the Commonwealth Bank, has used one of the latest versions of Apple's music player--the slimline 4GB Nano--to compare global currencies and purchasing power in 55 countries.

Along the lines of the Big Mac index launched 20 years ago by The Economist magazine, the survey prices the recently launched 4GB Nano in U.S. dollars and found Brazilians pay the most for an iPod, shelling out $369.61.

That was well above second-placed Bulgaria, where locals and visitors pay $318.60 for the player, which Apple recently introduced at the same price as the older, less capable Nano.

"It's not often that you get something for nothing. Even in technology land where there are constant improvements in product quality, it ranked as a big deal," Craig James, chief equities economist at Commonwealth Bank, told Reuters.

Hong Kong was the cheapest place to buy a Nano at $148.12, while the United States was second cheapest at $149, followed by Japan ($154.21), Taiwan ($165.82) and Singapore ($167.31).

Australia, where the local dollar has surged to 18-year highs, jumped 11 spots into eighth place with the Nano costing $175.42, cheaper than Germany ($211.62), France ($225.82), South Korea ($180.60) and even China where the machine is manufactured.

Within the euro zone, the Nano's price also differed, with retailers in Greece offering the cheapest deal.

Purchasing-power-parity surveys compare the prices of goods in different countries and at their simplest level can help show whether one currency is undervalued against another.

James said the results underscored the falling U.S. currency against almost all others around the world.

"It also highlights the effect of tariffs and taxation in countries. The Brazilians, the Argentinians, are going overseas probably to do their shopping," he explained.

"Its clear from the changes in the Apple iPod range that price deflation is alive and well in the technology space. It is a near-nirvana situation for consumers."

This is the CommSec iPod Index from highest to lowest, based on October 2007 prices in U.S. dollars:

Brazil $369.61; Bulgaria $318.60; Argentina $317.45; Israel $300.80; Peru $294.08; Chile $294.06; Malta $293.83; Egypt $269.10; Romania $266.60; Uruguay $260.00; Turkey $256.12; Hungary $254.50; Azerbaijan $252.11; Serbia $249.14; Croatia $245.41; Czech $242.54; Slovakia $234.13; Estonia $226.67; South Africa $226.60; Finland $225.82; France $225.82; Russia $220.32; Norway $220.20; Sweden $215.35; Belgium $211.62; Austria $211.62; Italy $211.62; Portugal $211.62; Ireland $211.62; Germany $211.62; Netherlands $211.62; Denmark $209.26; U.K. $201.92; Mexico $201.87; Cyprus $201.85; Luxembourg $201.12; Poland $200.52; Philippines $198.39; Spain $197.42; Greece $196.51; Switzerland $195.43; India $183.47; Malaysia $181.82; Korea $180.60; New Zealand $180.58; China $179.63; Pakistan $179.48; Australia $175.42; Thailand $174.89; Canada $169.68; Singapore $167.31; Taiwan $165.82; Japan $154.21; U.S. $149.00; Hong Kong $148.12

Source: CommSec, Apple

and here is the link: http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9584_22-6211724.html
 
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