HTC Knight hits Best Buy’s system with PG0610 model name

We’ve already seen what’s purported to be the HTC Knight show up in Sprint’s database under the guise of the HTC A7373, and we now have yet another model name thrown into the mix courtesy of this supposedly legitimate shot of Best Buy’s data transfer system. As you can see, what’s clearly labeled as the HTC Knight is now sporting the PG0610 designation (previously seen at the FCC), and it’s chilling alongside the HTC EVO 4G, which certainly makes sense — although it’s less clear what the ancient HTC Apache is doing there. For those that haven’t been keeping track, this is the same phone that’s also been known as the EVO Shift 4G and the Speedy, one of which may or may not be the device’s actual name when it’s finally, officially launched — hopefully at CES next month.

HTC Knight hits Best Buy’s system with PG0610 model name originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Dec 2010 20:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nexus S UK launch bumped back to December 22nd, price cut affirmed

Those cursed limited supplies of the Nexus S have forced the Carphone Warehouse and Best Buy’s UK outlets to push back the phone’s retail debut by a couple of days. The Gingerbread flagship will now be sailing in on the 22nd of December and even then it’ll be available only in “key” stores. Online purchases are encouraged, with an “instant ship delivery” getting the phone out to your nearest Carphone Warehouse branch for collection. Pre-orderers should presumably be getting their handsets on Wednesday too, while the £430 unlocked price has also been confirmed. So it’s still good news, you’ll just have to be either lucky or good to get your hands on one in time for the Queen’s speech.

Continue reading Nexus S UK launch bumped back to December 22nd, price cut affirmed

Nexus S UK launch bumped back to December 22nd, price cut affirmed originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Dec 2010 07:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Best Buy offering free mobile hotspots with iPad purchase

Planning to pay Verizon an extra $130 for an iPad + MiFi 2200 bundle? Hold on a sec, because Best Buy’s planning to give away hotspots free of charge when you purchase Apple’s tablet. This advertisement, obtained by 9to5 Mac, does mention that you’ll need to shackle yourself to a carrier for two years to qualify — unlike Verizon’s original arrangement — but in exchange you get a free Verizon FiveSpot, AT&T MiFi, or perhaps most excitingly, a WiMax-capable Sprint Overdrive. Fine print in the lower-right hand corner suggests that the promo will begin immediately and run through January 2nd. What better way to spend your leftover Hanukkah gelt than on gigabytes of wireless data?

Best Buy offering free mobile hotspots with iPad purchase originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 19 Dec 2010 23:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Best Buy nixes restocking fees

With just five days left for Christmas shopping, Best Buy has enacted a most welcome plan to get you in the door — effective immediately, it’s abolished the infamous 15 percent restocking fee that the company traditionally charged for a wide variety of product returns. The Consumerist reports that computers, tablets, projectors, camcorders, digital cameras, radar detectors, GPS units, in-car video systems and audio equipment will no longer carry the fee, and that iPhones (which incurred a 10 percent restocking fee) are exempt as well. Only special orders will still carry the charge. What’s more, the company will allegedly refund any such fees charged since November 17th. Bravo!

Best Buy nixes restocking fees originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 19 Dec 2010 18:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nexus S sees UK SIM-free price chopped to £430, Best Buy’s Christmas deliveries not so guaranteed

The UK price for the Nexus S just became a whole lot (nearly 22 percent) more attractive, thanks to the Carphone Warehouse slashing the SIM-free purchase option to a sweet £429.99 ($668). Contract-saddled pricing has also taken a tumble, as the Nexus S can now be had for free on two-year agreements costing £30 ($47) per month. Good news all around, then, but be aware that the handset is now listed as being on back order, having been “in stock” earlier in the week. Speaking of delays, we’re also hearing Best Buy’s guaranteed Christmas delivery — something proudly signposted on the Nexus S online order page — might very well miss Santa’s delivery window. A couple of our readers have received emails from the retailer advising them that their Gingerbread packages will be shipped “within the next 1-2 weeks,” but might not get there by December 24th. So happy holidays and best of luck!

[Thanks, Taylor and Rod]

Continue reading Nexus S sees UK SIM-free price chopped to £430, Best Buy’s Christmas deliveries not so guaranteed

Nexus S sees UK SIM-free price chopped to £430, Best Buy’s Christmas deliveries not so guaranteed originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 19 Dec 2010 10:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dell Streak slips to $100 on contract at Best Buy

Discounts are raining down from the heavens these days as retailers try to offload old stock and do a bit of tidying up before rolling in the fresh batch of 2011 smartphones. Best Buy is keeping with this trend by treating its customers to a nice big saving on the AT&T-attached Dell Streak, offering it up for a mere $100 in upfront costs. The typical two-year commitment will be required from you, but that might just be worth it for this 5-inch Android slate, particularly if you load it up with the latest firmware. Pricing is the same for both the black and white versions, so if you’re keen to swap a small bulge in your wallet for a large protruding tabletphone in your pocket, you know where to look.

[Thanks, Jeremy C.]

Dell Streak slips to $100 on contract at Best Buy originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 05:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Best Buy sees big drop in TV sales, eases pain with beefy mobile revenue

Best Buy’s stock took a 14.8 percent beating today on news that it earned $217 million in the third quarter — a 4.4 percent decline year over year — and felt compelled to revise its fourth quarter forecast downwards. The reason? Seems folks are holding off on buying televisions in a big way: the company suffered a “low-double digit’ decline in boob tube sales, even worse than an industry average in the single digits, which would suggest that 2010’s 3D revolution hasn’t attracted the kind of consumer attention manufacturers (and content providers) would’ve liked. If there’s a silver lining, it’s that double digit increases in phone sales — combined with a single digit boost in tablets and related mobile devices (read: iPads) — helped to offset the TV decline. Of course, we’re sure people will need new LCDs and plasmas eventually… but maybe it’s going to have to wait for 4K.

Best Buy sees big drop in TV sales, eases pain with beefy mobile revenue originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Dec 2010 18:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Best Buy tells the Nexus S retail story: 8AM online sales, two per customer maximum

Want a Nexus S this Thursday? Yeah, well, welcome to the club, pal — you’re not alone, so you’re going to want to be armed with the right information to figure out your plan of attack. Best Buy has announced the details of how it’ll go about selling Samsung’s Google-branded monster, and unlike many recent launches, this one is strictly first-come, first-serve — none of that craziness where you put down $50 in advance to secure your place and get it off the price of the phone on launch day. All stores will be opening at 8AM local time (which is just the normal open time during the holiday season, actually), and online sales will commence at 8AM Eastern Time to coincide with the phone’s retail launch on the east coast. You’ll be limited to two phones per person — sorry, eBay scalpers — and you might want to call ahead or make friends with an employee in the next day or two, because inventory will vary from store to store. What won’t vary, though, is demo unit availability: every store that’s selling the phone will have a live demo unit to play with while you make your decision. As a refresher, you’re looking at $199 on contract, $249.99 with an add-a-line activation, or $529 contract-free; follow the break for the full press release.

Continue reading Best Buy tells the Nexus S retail story: 8AM online sales, two per customer maximum

Best Buy tells the Nexus S retail story: 8AM online sales, two per customer maximum originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Dec 2010 00:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Best Buy makes iPhone 3GS free on contract tomorrow, December 10th

Only a few days after Radio Shack unveiled the first iPhone sale in recorded history, Best Buy’s done one better — it’s offering up the 8GB iPhone 3GS “to qualified customers” without charging a cent for the handset. Yes, that’s a free iPhone, not counting the AT&T ball and chain, for the likely-far-less-than-one-day supplies will last, and so we imagine a fair number of you will start queuing up right now to get in on the action. Not a bad way to move surplus inventory and head off perennially rumored CDMA juggernauts at the pass — promise them the free iPhone, then lock them into those two-year contracts. It’s hard to resist!

[Thanks, The Crusher]

Best Buy makes iPhone 3GS free on contract tomorrow, December 10th originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Dec 2010 22:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Phone 7 devices are being discounted by third parties, but it’s business as usual

We’re seeing reports pop up that discounting — some of it heavy — off the full retail prices of Windows Phone 7 handsets by third-party retailers this early in the game could be a sign of trouble for Microsoft, but realistically, you can’t use that yardstick for guesstimating how well a phone (or a platform, in this case) is doing. Guys like Amazon, Wirefly, Simplexity (which runs a number of mobile stores, including Walmart), and Best Buy Mobile regularly undercut carriers’ first-party pricing on handsets immediately following release — or shortly thereafter — because it’s effectively a win-win: they’re given multi-hundred-dollar commissions for each new contract they bring to the network, giving them the wiggle room to apply some of that cash to the sticker price. The retailers win because they’re earning sales by offering phones for less than the carriers, and the carriers still win because they’re pushing on-contract units either way — and that means they’ve captured another long-term revenue stream, which is where the real money’s at. Popular Android devices like the Epic 4G and the Vibrant (among countless others) were handled the same way in the retail channel as these Windows Phone 7 devices are being handled.

Of course, that’s not to say we know Windows Phone 7 is selling well — Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore dodged questions about numbers this week at D: Dive into Mobile, which seems shady at best for a platform that’s now been on the market for a solid month. We are saying, though, that you can’t use third-party discounting to steer the conversation either way. Call us when AT&T or T-Mobile starts blowing out Quantums and HD7s for a penny directly when they’re not tied up in some sort of holiday BOGO promotion, because that’s when you have to worry.

Correction: Walmart’s mobile store is actually operated by LetsTalk, not Simplexity as we’d originally reported.

Windows Phone 7 devices are being discounted by third parties, but it’s business as usual originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Dec 2010 14:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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