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The first customers to purchase their new iPhone 5s exit an Apple flagship store on George street in Sydney, Australia. | 
For the most devoted Apple aficionados, it's been a long week. But as Thursday night became Friday morning around the world, some of those diehards who spent hours waiting in line were greeted with open doors at Apple stores and other retailers selling the new iPhone 5.
Announced September 12,
 the iPhone 5 features a bigger screen, lighter and slimmer frame, 
faster processor and, for the first time, 4G LTE wireless connections. If a handful of tech writers were unimpressed with the specs, that didn't translate into lack of consumer interest.
Apple took 2 million pre-orders for the phone in the first 24 hours they were available last week, and some analysts think it could sell more than 10 million by Monday.
That first-day total was 
double the number of iPhone 4S pre-orders the company took last year, 
and an initial Friday shipping date was quickly pushed back. People who 
pre-order the phone now, or did so in the past few days, could be 
waiting more than three weeks for their phones to ship.
For those who opted to 
get personal, the doors at Apple retail stores open at 8 a.m. local time
 Friday in the United States, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Hong 
Kong, Japan, Singapore and the UK. The phone will roll out to 22 more 
countries on September 28.
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Despite morning rainfall 
in Tokyo, hundreds of eager customers lined up outside an Apple store in
 the city's Ginza shopping district. Store employees handed out 
umbrellas to waiting customers, some of whom came sporting face paint to
 celebrate the occasion.
"It's almost like a 
festival, people just camping in the center of Ginza, just drinking and 
playing and talking to each other," said Taiyo Nakashima, a 34-year-old 
web designer. "It's not really just buying the phone, it's just enjoying
 the party, really."
In Sydney, Australia, customers camped out in tents and folding chairs. Cheers erupted when the store's doors opened.
Todd Foot told CNN 
affiliate Network Ten that he waited for more than 70 hours to get 
Australia's first iPhone for sale and review it online.
In Hong Kong, the situation was calmer. To avoid chaotic crowds, like those seen in Beijing in January, the Apple store in central Hong Kong was only selling the new iPhones to customers who had reserved a device online.
The busy store still had extra security and measures to control crowds in place. The most popular single 
smartphone since the existence of such a device, the iPhone has sold 
more than 244 million units around the world since then-CEO Steve Jobs 
unveiled it six years ago.
In a sign of the continued reverence for Jobs around the world, the Madame Tussauds in Hong Kong is set to unveil a wax figure of his likeness next week.
According to research 
firm IDC, the iPhone and its iOS operating system make up 16.9% of the 
worldwide smartphone market, coming in behind the cluster of phones 
running the Android operating system, which account for 68.1% of the 
world's smartphones.
The iPhone 5 is 18% 
thinner and 20% lighter than the current version, the iPhone 4S. It has a
 4-inch screen, measured diagonally, compared with a 3.5-inch screen on 
previous versions of the phone. It is the same width as the iPhone 4S 
but taller, and the iPhone 5 is made entirely of glass and aluminum. CNN
 
 
 
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