The
Canalys numbers are out, and with
Android coming off an
886 percent jump reported at the end of the second quarter we were expecting something big. So, here it is: Android is up 1,309 percent worldwide from this time last year, taking over 43.6 percent of the US smartphone market in the third quarter. In terms of mobile operating systems that makes it the dominant player in America, but with Apple capturing 26.2 percent it now jumps into the lead when it comes to hardware, beating out RIM's 24.2 percent. That's a swap from last quarter, where BlackBerries beat iPhones 32 to 21.7 percent, and worldwide things are looking the same: Apple at 17 percent compared to RIM's 15. However around the globe it's Nokia and the Symbian Foundation still dominating the stage as the leading smart phone OS vendor, owning 33 percent of the market compared to 38 last quarter, while Microsoft sits at a lowly 3 percent. With
WP7 ready to rock the world, and Ballmer ready to
release the advertising hounds, that's a figure we'll be keeping a close eye on for the next few quarters.
Update: NPD has
posted its third quarter smartphone market share and Mobile Phone Track reports; they basically back up Canalys' report, though NPD gives both Apple and RIM slightly less market share. Interestingly, RIM's BlackBerry
Curve 8500 series is identified as the second-best selling phone in the US in the quarter, while the lowly LG
Cosmos for Verizon takes third. Weird, huh?
Canalys: iPhone becomes most popular smartphone in the US, Android continues as most popular OS originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Nov 2010 08:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink |
Canalys |
Email this |
Comments
LAM RESEARCH
L1 IDENTITY SOLUTIONS
KINGSTON TECHNOLOGY COMPANY
KEY
No comments:
Post a Comment