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Alex Lee, a 27-year-old customer who flew in from Dubai to join the 500-person-long line along London's Regent Street, said his journey and hours of waiting had been worth it. "It's so thin, maybe five or six credit cards thick
-- it's amazing," he said, clutching his new handset. In the trendy Tokyo shopping district of Harajuku, over 300 people were lined up at the flagship store of Softbank, Japan's exclusive carrier, when its doors opened in the morning. That store ran out of phones by early afternoon, said company spokesman Naoki Nakayama. "We've been selling out at each launch, it's the same conditions," he said, declining to release any numbers. When the initial version of the iPhone was released in Japan two years ago, some questioned whether it could succeed without many of the advanced hardware features common on Japanese models. But the phone's addictive touch screen and broad selection of downloadable applications have made it a runaway hit in the country. Yet some in Japan say the phone has become a victim of its own success, causing the network to slow down, as more people use them. Motoki Sato, a university student waited through the night before the launch along with dozens of others at a store in Shibuya, to get "a birthday present for myself" when he turned 24 on Thursday. The newest model is thinner with a better-resolution screen and longer battery life. It features a new operating system that can also be installed on some older models.
[Associated
Press;
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