Would you like to see the iPhone 4 on Verizon? - iPhone 4 Forum
After reading all the latest rumors that broke then weekend with the iPhone 4 coming to Verizon late this year or early next year. I thought it would.
After reading all the latest rumors that broke then weekend with the iPhone 4 coming to Verizon late this year or early next year. I thought it would.
Verizon iPhone 4 Release Update: The rumor that never dies. Last Updated on Monday, 9 August 2010 03:26 Posted by Debbie Turner | Filed under U.S. Monday, 9 August. Verizon iPhone 4 Release Update: The rumor that never dies ...
Apple is now rumored to make a CDMA Verizon iPhone 4 with a new antenna design, new 9.7- and 7-inch iPads with Cortex A9 CPUs and a new Apple TV.
A while before the iPhone 4 was launched, a lot of people believed (or wanted to believe) that we will finally get a Verizon iPhone 4 sometime in June. In the meanwhile, the iPhone 4 was launched only at AT&T, leaving a lot of people ...
According to TechCrunch, we could be seeing the iPhone land on the Verizon network in January. The reasons for this are related to tracking what components are.
CDMA iPhone 4 is arriving on Verizon. Apple has submitted orders for millions of units of Qualcomm CDMA chipsets for a Verizon iPhone 4. If reports are legit then CDMA version of iPhone 4 might hit the shelves in January 2011.
The iPhone 4 for Verizon Wireless is rumored to be launching in January 2011 according to sources that claim Apple has ordered millions of Qualcomm CDMA chips.
CDMA version of iPhone on Verizon has been rumored for years, so much that probably now no one believes it anymore, unless of course Steve announces it in one of those events. Now if the latest round of rumors from TechCrunch are to be ...
The most delicious iPhone fairy tales are often served up over the weekend, making the most recent "Why The Verizon iPhone Rumors are True—CDMA iPhone Due in January" burped up by Tech Crunch a sweet qualifying contender.
Verizon iPhone rumors are legion these days, but finally, for once, the evidence appears to be nigh indisputable—you just need to know where to look.