Shopkeepers cheer for smartphone buyers in Jakarta after Apple's latest smartphone went on sale following a monthslong ban in Indonesia. The marketing and sale of iPhone 16 models was prohibited by the government in October over Apple’s failure to meet regulation requiring that 40 percent of smartphone components be made from local parts. Apple has agreed to invest $150 million in building two facilities in the country -- one in Bandung in West Java province to produce accessories, and another in Batam for AirTags.
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00:22it's quite long I've been waiting for since September October yeah but I want
00:42to buy from local because there is a warranty from the i-box yeah so I don't
00:47buy offices it's already the habit that we have use iPhone and then the technology and also
00:54all the things with iPad and anything combined with Apple so it's not difficult to change another device