Apple has sold away of initial supplies of the young iPad in every country where it will launch the tablet on Friday, and is instantly telling buyers that orders will not send for up to three weeks.
In the U.S. and Canada, altogether iPad pre-orders set through Apple’s online shop will straightaway send on March 19, three days afterwards the on-sale date. Customers who placed an lodge very early in the pre-sale appendage were told they will get the tablet on Friday, March 16.
Some consumers, including Computerworld staffers who ordered the new iPad last Wednesday, get received emails confirming that their tablets experience been shipped.
Australian orders will transport on March 22, while those ordered in other first-wave markets — France, Japan, Germany, Switzerland and the U.K. — currently demonstrate a shipping hold of two to three weeks.
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Hong Kong’s online store but says that the new iPad is currently unavailable.
U.S. carriers AT&T and Verizon, both which will also sell the iPad, are solely taking customers’ email addresses for after notification when the tablet is available.
The tight supplies and resulting delays were not surprising.
Last year, the Apple iPad 2 sold away on its first daytime of availability in the U.S., where shipping delays changed several times on opening day, first from two to three line days, then five to seven days, and eventually fell on two to three weeks.
Four days later those delays had developed to four to five weeks, a timespan that one analyst predicted “intense.”
Apple acknowledged it could not keep up with demand for the iPad 2.
In an April 2011 conference vociferation with Wall Street analysts, Tim Cook, at the time its chief operations officer, predicted demand “staggering” and admitted orders were bogged down in the “mother of altogether9999 backlogs.”
Not until the mid-point of 2011′s 3rd quarter did Apple claim iPad 2 supplies had matched demand.
More recently, analysts anticipated that Apple would face a repetition of the problem, in large share because suppliers of the new model’s higher-resolution screen receive had difficulty getting high yields from their lines.
iPad sales
Source: Apple earnings reports.
Last week, Richard Shim, a senior analyst with DisplaySearch, enounced manufacturing the iPad’s 2,048-by-1,536 pixel screen was a “challenge” for Sharp, Samsung and LG Display.




