Monday, January 31, 2011

Android Overtakes Symbian as World's No. 1Smartphone Platform

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its been a long time coming and should come as
no surprise to anyone who has been tracking Android's meteoric rise -- both in the U.S. and worldwide -- that Google's mobile OS has finally
outpaced Nokia's stalwart Symbian platform as
the leading smartphone OS worldwide.
gadget, citing figures by Canalys, reports that Android sold 33.3 million devices in the fourth
quarter of 2010. That's a 13-million device spike
from even the previous quarter, which saw 20.3
million Android devices moved. Now second-
place Symbian sold 31 million devices in Q4 2010. According to the Canalsy press release, the
number of Android devices sold was slightly less
than Engadget's reported figure, at 32.9 million --
still enough to retain the number one spot. Canalys also pointed out that Nokia still retained
its spot as the number one global smartphone
vendor, dominating 28 percent of the market.
Android can't compete in that department thanks
to the fractured nature of its platform, allowing
multiple vendors to support the OS -- for this reason, Netgear CEO Patrick Lo predicts Android will become the de facto standard on a range of consumer electronic devices. HTC and Samsung
combined for almost 45 percent of Android
device sales, with LG, Acer, and others rounding
out the rest. 2010 also signaled huge year-over-year growth
in terms of total worldwide smartphone sales.
"The final quarter took shipments for the year to
fractionally below 300 million units, with an
annual growth rate of 80% over 2009," Canalys
said. The important U.S. market continued to dominate
regionally, as well, with double the amount of
smartphones sold than China. "Android was by
far the largest smart phone platform in the US
market in Q4 2010, with shipments of 12.1
million units – nearly three times those of RIM's BlackBerry devices," Canalys said. The biggest loser, perhaps, was Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 platform . It appeared too late in the quarter to fully capture the holiday buying
window. As a result, Microsoft's market share
dipped from 8 percent in Q4 of 2009 to 5 percent
in the same quarter of 2010.

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