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LONDON - Vodafone Group said yesterday it was concerned the current iPhone mobile phone - Apple's latest "killer" gadget - does not operate on fast 3G networks.
Amid speculation that Apple is close to handing a deal to Vodafone's rivals to bring iPhones to Europe, the mobile phone giant said only any deal needed to make sense for shareholders.
"It's clearly a good, software-driven device, but we're concerned about wideband area coverage so that 3G (third-generation) or HSDPA (upgraded 3G) connectivity with the iPhone is something that we look forward to.
"Every product, every alterative, every choice here has a price and we just have to be conscious of what it is that we're doing for our customers and our shareholders,"
Sarin told a conference call after the company posted strong quarterly numbers.
Analysts expected Vodafone to be in prime position to secure an exclusive, pan-European deal to sell iPhones, which have flown off the shelves in the United States, but warned that Apple was a tough negotiator and liked to dictate terms.
Apple, whose iPhones operate over slower 2.5 generation networks in the United States, is not expected to bring out a 3G version until March 2008, analysts say.
And Vodafone has invested heavily in its 3G network and services.
iPhones, which combine Apple's hugely popular iPod digital music player, a video player and Web browser into a sleek, touch-screen device, went on sale in the United States in June.
Sarin said virtually every mobile company was having a conversation with Apple, but that he could not comment further on any potential decision or announcement.
- REUTERS