Posts tagged Apple
Report: Windows to leapfrog Apple in smartphone market by 2015
Apr 1st
The smartphone market is expected to see increased competition during the next several years, with major manufacturers leapfrogging each other for greater pieces of market share.
According to IDC’s Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, the smartphone market will grow by nearly 50 percent during 2011, as more companies adopt the devices for greater mobility management.
While multiple recent reports pronounce Android to be the king of the smartphone market for years to come, IDC’s analysis found that Windows Phone devices will see significant growth during the next several years.
During 2011, IDC predicts that the Android operating system will lead all OS with a 39.5 percent market share, with Nokia’s Symbian OS taking 20.9 percent. Apple’s iOS will be third with 15.7 percent, followed by Research In Motion’s BlackBerry OS with 14.9 percent and Windows Mobile with 5.5 percent. However, Nokia’s partnership with Microsoft, using the Windows Phone, will fuel the manufacturer’s market from 2011 through 2015, achieving a compound annual growth rate of 67.1 percent during those years.
IDC predicts that by 2015, the Nokia-Microsoft partnership will produce the second largest market share at 20.9 percent, behind only Android, whose share will grow to 45.4 percent. Apple’s iOS will remain third with 15.3 percent, followed by the BlackBerry OS with 13.7 percent. With Nokia all but abandoning the Symbian OS, its CAGR between 2011 and 2015 will be a 65 percent loss, resulting in a 0.2 percent market share in 2015.
“Nokia’s recent announcement to shift from Symbian to Windows Phone will have significant implications for the smartphone market going forward,” said Ramon Llamas, a senior research analyst in IDC’s mobile devices technology and trends team. “Up until the launch of Windows Phone 7 last year, Microsoft has steadily lost market share while other operating systems have brought forth new and appealing experiences. The new alliance brings together Nokia’s hardware capabilities and Windows Phone’s differentiated platform. We expect the first devices to launch in 2012. By 2015, IDC expects Windows Phone to be number 2 operating system worldwide behind Android.”
An intriguing variable in the projections is AT&T’s recent rumored acquisition of T-Mobile, which would combine the second- and fourth-largest providers in the U.S. The merger might have a possible affect on both providers’ users and the types of smartphones being sold.
This entry was posted by Mobility Management News Desk on Wednesday, March 30th, 2011 at 5:53 am and is filed under Managing Mobile Devices News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a comment, or trackback from your own site.
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From www.visagemobile.com
Nokia files further complaint against Apple alleging major patent infringement
Mar 30th
[March 30, 2011]
Nokia files further complaint against Apple alleging major patent infringement
(Canadian Press DataFile Via Acquire Media NewsEdge) HELSINKI, Finland _ Nokia is suing Apple in the United States for allegedly infringing patents in “virtually all” of its mobile phones, portable music players, tablets and computers, the Finnish company said Tuesday.
The complaint, filed with United States International Trade Commission, ITC, is the latest in a string of lawsuits by Nokia and comes as the world’s largest handset maker struggles to keep up with smartphone rivals like Apple.
Nokia said the seven patents in the new complaint relate to its “pioneering innovations” that Apple allegedly is using “to create key features in its products, including in multitasking operating systems, data synchronization, positioning, call quality and the use of Bluetooth accessories.” Last week, the ITC found no violation in an earlier complaint. Nokia said it “is waiting to see the full details of the ruling before deciding on the next steps in that case.” Last year, Nokia Corp. also sued Apple Inc. in Britain, Germany and the Netherlands for allegedly infringing its patents with technology used in the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch.
Those followed earlier lawsuits by Nokia claiming that a broad swath of Apple products violate its patents. Apple had earlier responded with its own infringement claims against Nokia.
“Our latest ITC filing means we now have 46 Nokia patents in suit against Apple, many filed more than 10 years before Apple made its first iPhone,” said Paul Melin, vice-president of intellectual property at Nokia.
“Nokia is a leading innovator in technologies needed to build great mobile products and Apple must stop building its products using Nokia’s proprietary innovation.” Nokia said that in the past two decades it has invested some C43 billion in research and development to build “one of the wireless industry’s strongest and broadest IPR portfolios,” which includes more than 10,000 patent families.
The legal disputes, which generally don’t stop products reaching markets, come amid increasing competition in the fast-growing smartphone market. Tech companies are scrambling to win over the growing number of consumers buying handsets that come with email, Web surfing, cameras, videos and scores of apps for checking the weather, updating Facebook and other tasks.
Nokia has been struggling against stiff competition, especially from the iPhone and RIM’s Blackberry.
In addition to the two ITC complaints, Nokia said it has filed cases on the same patents and others in Delaware, and has further cases proceeding in Mannheim, Dusseldorf and the Federal Patent Court in Germany, the UK High Court in London and the District Court of the Hague in the Netherlands. Some of them will come to trial in the next few months.
Nokia stock closed almost unchanged at C6.17 ($8.68) on the Helsinki Stock Exchange.
Online: http://www.nokia.com (c) 2011 The Canadian Press
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From www.tmcnet.com
Nokia Loses Round One to Apple in Patent Wars
Mar 26th
Finnish mobile phone market leader Nokia has come out on the losing end in some if its patent infringement battles with the American PC giant, Apple.
Acting as arbitrator in the clash of the titans, a judge from the US International Trade Commission ruled in favour of Apple in five of the patent wars, and determined that Apple did not commit any intellectual property infringements against Nokia.
Judge James Gildea of the ITC did not outline the basis for his decision. The six-member commission may still overturn this ruling, which will be probed later this year.
Nokia still has not received any details about the decision, and Communications Manager Päivi Tallqvist says the company will decide on a future course of action after it has this information.
In 2009 Nokia filed several patent infringement cases against Apple based on the development of its wireless handsets. In its turn, Apple counter sued, claiming that Nokia had infringed on patents related to the iPhone.
The International Trade Commission hears many patent cases and can bar the import of devices found to be infringing another company’s patents.
From www.yle.fi
Rejected By Apple, Radiation App Targets Jailbreakers
Mar 24th

(click image for larger view)
Tawkon, a company that makes an app of the same name that purports to let users “see the level of radiation they are exposed to from their mobile phone,” has released its app on Cydia, an online app store for jailbroken iPhones, because Apple would not accept it.
“[W]hen Steve Jobs personally closed the front door with a curt two-word email stating: ‘No Interest,’ we were left with no alternative but to climb through the Cydia window to let iPhone users see and lower their exposure to cellphone radiation,” declared Tawkon CEO Gil Friedlander in a blog post.
Apple’s reason for rejecting the Takwon app, said Amit Lubovsky, Tawkon co-founder and CTO in a phone interview, was that it used private APIs. An Apple representative the company had been dealing with had been pushing for the Apple to make those APIs public, Lubovsky said, but then the issues with the iPhone 4′s antenna surfaced last year. When Tawkon published a video showing that holding the iPhone 4 in a certain way could affect its signal strength, Apple became less interested in helping Tawkon.
“We assume they didn’t want to deal with anything to do with radiation due to this issue,” said Lubovsky.
Asked about the usefulness of the Tawkon app, John Sedat, professor emeritus in the department of biochemistry and biophysics at UCSF in San Francisco, said he would be suspicious about the app in the absence of more detailed technical information about how it works.
“One has to be very specific about what wavelength one is measuring,” he said.
Effective measurement of environmental radiation, he suggested, would require dedicated external hardware. The Tawkon app doesn’t measure radiation through a radiation sensor — Geiger counters are not included in mobile phone hardware, though the idea is being explored by researchers. Rather, the app attempts to measure radiation exposure based on SAR data obtained through phone model testing, the phone’s proximity to the user, the user’s proximity to cell towers and other environmental factors.
Lubovsky says the app measures actual phone radiation output using test models. “Each device launched with Tawkon to the market is being calibrated prior to the launch on a SAR machine,” he wrote in an e-mail.
Yet, the app, the company says in its legal disclaimer, “is not standard measurement equipment and therefore provides imperfect accuracy with respect to its results and indications. Furthermore, the Software’s output shall serve for reference purpose only and does not replace an accurate and professional examination.”
Lubovsky says that RIM had asked his company to add the disclaimer as a condition for inclusion in its BlackBerry app store. “I’m sure about the accuracy of the software,” he said. And he points to UCLA epidemiology professor Leeka Kheifets as an expert who has endorsed his company’s approach.
But if one accepts the utility of the app as a way to measure radiation, it’s far from clear that exposure to cell phone radiation matters. Ionizing radiation, like x-rays, can harm people at high enough intensity But that’s not what cell phones emit. “Microwave cell phone radiation is non-ionizing,” explained Sedat.
The data about non-ionizing radiation is inconclusive, which is to say that most reputable studies have found that cell phone radiation has no significant effect on human health. A few studies, however, suggest otherwise or demonstrate effects on animals. Sedat characterized the situation as “a can of worms.” The consensus among scientists seems to be that being prudent and trying to minimize cell phone radiation exposure is probably worthwhile. But no one’s really sure.
Lubovsky insists his company’s app provides a valuable service. “Tawkon believes in giving users the ability to ‘see’ exposure to radiation for the first time…”, he wrote. “In addition, Tawkon provides practical real-time suggestions how to reduce exposure to radiation – like telling the user to go back to where they were, change the orientation of their phone (vertical / horizontal and vice versa), activate bluetooth, and other suggestions. Users can also monitor their own stats to see how much non-ionizing radiation exposure they avoided by heeding Tawkon prompts over the last call, day, week, month and six months.”
To the extent that the Tawkon app, which is available for Android phones as well as BlackBerry devices and iPhones, makes users aware of radiation as an issue and encourages them to take ownership of decisions affecting their health, that’s probably a good thing.
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From www.informationweek.com
What would Apple’s future be without Steve Jobs?
Feb 27th
Apple Inc. has pulled off a string of runaway hits from the iPhone to the iPad that revolutionized every industry it touched. It has become the world’s second-most-valuable company, worth more than $300 billion.
But when shareholders met Wednesday at the company’s Cupertino, Calif., headquarters, the buzz was not about Apple’s next sleek new gadget or soaring profits. Much of the talk was about Chief Executive Steve Jobs and what Apple would do without him.
The secretive Apple has been reluctant to talk publicly about Jobs’ battle with a rare form of pancreatic cancer and a liver transplant. But the uncertainty shrouding his latest leave of absence has unsettled investors and rankled corporate governance experts, who say the company’s fortunes are inextricably linked to Jobs.
Investors voted down a resolution Wednesday that would have forced Apple’s board to disclose its succession plans. And yet, they are waiting anxiously to see if Jobs shows up for Apple’s annual developers conference in June to introduce the latest iPhone.
But what if Jobs does not take the stage to utter his signature “one more thing” line?
“Everyone knows that he might not return,” said one former executive, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to preserve his relationship with Apple. “The company is prepared for all eventualities.”
Many analysts are putting their faith in Apple’s momentum. “Apple is a well-oiled machine,” said Tim Bajarin of research firm Creative Strategies Inc.
Analysts and former Apple executives say its current crop of blockbuster products — and its plans for future updates and products, which are kept tightly under wraps, with only a small group privy to the details — could fuel the company’s growth for several years even in fast-moving, hotly competitive markets where product cycles are measured in months.
Apple’s troops have been trained to “think like Steve” even when he’s not there. Many of the company’s best ideas came from its ranks, not from Jobs, who turns 56 on Thursday.
No one is more versed in how Jobs thinks than the top executives that he hand-picked. Highly skilled in their respective disciplines, they include Tim Cook, who received high marks for running the company during Jobs’ absences, and Jonathan Ive, widely considered one of the most talented industrial designers in the world. Ron Johnson, who oversees 317 Apple stores, has helped the company create one of the world’s most profitable chains. Eddy Cue, Apple’s vice president of Internet services, is behind the soaring success of the iTunes and App stores.
They all, in Jobs’ words, work together “to make a little dent in the universe.”
“This is a really strong team that hasn’t gotten a lot of time in the sun. They have been standing under the tall tree of Steve Jobs,” the former Apple executive said. “Steve has been the face of the company, so people have the impression that there is nothing else there. They are wrong.”
But there are those who say that without Jobs, Apple will have to “think different,” in the words of its iconic advertising campaign. Perhaps more than any other chief executive in America, Jobs has made himself indispensable to his company. He commands a workforce of 50,000 with a tight grip, taking part in nearly every decision and earning credit for Apple’s historic run.
Cook, widely believed to be the most likely candidate to permanently replace Jobs as chief executive, has never run the company without Jobs’ input. And by some accounts, Apple lost some of its creative tension while Jobs was gone during two previous leaves.
None of the executives has been trained to straddle both operations and design or to fill Jobs’ shoes as the product visionary who can anticipate the wishes of consumers like a high-tech psychic. For years, important decisions at Apple have been made during weekly strategy sessions with the 10-member executive team that Jobs oversees.
Without Jobs, “what’s missing is Steve’s natural-born instincts,” Apple’s former chief talent officer Dan Walker said. “He’s such an iconic thinker and leader.”
People who have logged time at Apple say it’s possible that over time the company will morph into more of a solid industry player like Hewlett-Packard Co. than the radical force that has reshaped the music, movie and mobile phone industries.
“Without him, the innovation will slow, regardless of all the great people there,” a former high-ranking Apple employee said.
“When Apple does something, the whole world innovates. Who’s going to do that now? That’s not going to continue. I don’t care what anyone says. How could it? How can you replace Steve? The reality is, you can’t.”
Apple isn’t the first company to be dominated by a charismatic visionary with a perfectionist streak. Consider Walt Disney Co. after the loss of its namesake founder, Ford Motor Co. after Henry Ford or Wal-Mart Stores Inc. after Sam Walton. Disney slumped for two decades before Michael Eisner revived it. Ford reached its peak in the 1950s, a decade after Henry Ford’s death. On the other hand, Wal-Mart, which Walton built into the world’s largest retailer, continued to expand after his death in 1992.
Whether a business thrives depends on whether it has figured out how to make the values and vision of its leader part of the company’s culture.
“I think it’s hard for a very simple reason: Most founders believe that they are immortal, even though they’re not,” said Jeffrey Pfeffer, a professor at Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business. “Most boards are so over-awed by the founder that they’re not willing to push that individual.”
Jobs is likely to call the shots about when and how he leaves Apple, just as he has in the past. Jobs did not disclose to investors his 2004 cancer surgery or his 2009 liver transplant until after they occurred, creating tension between his right to privacy and investors’ right to know about his health.
Another former executive said Jobs had planned this transition as meticulously as anything else.
“Apple is not going to fall apart,” the former executive said. “Steve would never let that happen. He would never leave his company in someone’s hands who was not a visionary.”
From www.goerie.com
Nokia, Microsoft in pact to rival Apple, Google
Feb 11th
HELSINKI – Technology titans Nokia and Microsoft are combining forces to make smart phones that might challenge rivals like Apple and Google and revive their own fortunes in a market they have struggled to keep up with.
Nokia Corp., the world’s largest maker of mobile phones, said Friday it plans to use Microsoft Corp.’s Windows Phone software as the main platform for its smart phones in an effort to pull market share away from Apple’s iPhone and Android, Google’s software for phones and tablets.
The move marks a major strategy shift for Nokia, which has previously equipped devices with its own software. Analysts said the deal was a bigger win for Microsoft than Nokia, whose CEO Stephen Elop in a leaked memo this week compared his company to a burning oil platform with “more than one explosion … fueling a blazing fire around us.”
Nokia said the partnership would “deliver an ecosystem with unrivaled global reach and scale.” However, it warned that the new strategy would also bring “significant uncertainties,” and said it expects profit margins to be hit by strong competition from rivals.
Nokia’s share price plunged 9 percent to euro7.43 ($10.11) in afternoon trading in Helsinki.
Elop, a Canadian national, joined Nokia from a senior executive position at Microsoft last year. The first non-Finn to lead Nokia, he is under intense pressure to reverse the company’s market share losses to North American and Asian competitors.
“Nokia is at a critical juncture, where significant change is necessary and inevitable in our journey forward,” Elop said. He added the company was aiming at “regaining our smart phone leadership, reinforcing our mobile device platform and realizing our investments in the future.”
Speaking later to analysts in London, he declined to say when Nokia would introduce a new device running on Windows Phone. But he said Nokia won’t bury its own Symbian operating system or the new Meego platform that it is currently developing.
The Symbian technology is being used in 200 million phones with 150 million more expected on the market, Elop said.
Android surpassed Symbian to become the world’s No. 1 smart phone software in the fourth quarter of last year, according to the Canalys research firm.
Microsoft CEO Steven Ballmer said the partnership would give the team “more innovation, greater global reach and scale.”
“We need to, and we will, collaborate closely on development … so we can really align and drive the future revolution of the mobile phone,” he said.
The key challenge will be to come up with devices of a quality level and hip factor that helps position Windows Phone as an attractive alternative to iPhone or Android.
Windows Phone 7, which was launched last year, still has a lot of catching up to do in terms of both the number of users and the number of “apps” available for the phones.
Nokia said its expertise in developing new software with Microsoft will be “on top of the platform in areas such as imaging, where Nokia is a market leader.” Its map services will be a core part of the new device as will Microsoft’s Bing search engine, Nokia said.
Neil Mawston of London-based Strategy Analytics said Microsoft was the big winner in the partnership, by teaming up with the biggest mobile hardware vendor in the world.
“In terms of expanding their distribution reach, this is a huge win for Microsoft,” he said.
For Nokia the deal leaves uncertainty about what will happen to its current Symbian operating platform. Mawston said he expects it to be phased out within two years and “completely, or at least mostly, replaced by Windows Phone.”
Although Nokia still is the mobile industry’s biggest handset maker, its market share has plummeted from a high of 41 percent in 2008 to 31 percent in the last quarter of 2010.
It has also lost its innovative edge in the fiercely competitive top-end sector and is virtually invisible – with a 3 percent share – in the world’s largest smart phone market, North America.
Apples’ iPhone has set the standard for today’s smart phones and Research In Motion Ltd.’s BlackBerrys have become the favorite of the corporate set. More recently, Google Inc.’s Android software has emerged as the choice for phone makers that want to challenge the iPhone.
“Today, developers, operators and consumers want compelling mobile products, which include not only the device, but the software, services, applications and customer support that make a great experience,” Elop said.
He warned of further layoffs and restructuring, saying Nokia must “improve the speed and nimbleness and agility of the organization … by taking significant steps in how we operate.” He gave no details.
The company said it will announce a new leadership team and organizational structure “with a clear focus on speed, results and accountability.”
Nokia, which claims 1.3 billion daily users of its devices, said it hopes the “broad, strategic partnership” with Microsoft will lead to capturing the next billion users to join the Internet
From www.newsnet5.com
Nokia, Microsoft in pact to rival Apple, Google
Feb 11th
HELSINKI —
Technology titans Nokia and Microsoft are joining forces to make smart phones in a push to challenge rivals like Apple and Google, hoping to revive their own fortunes in a market they have struggled to keep up with.
Nokia Corp., the world’s largest cell phone maker, said Friday it will use Microsoft Corp.’s Windows Phone software as the main platform for its smart phones in an effort to recover lost share from Apple’s iPhone and Android, Google’s software for phones and tablets.
The move marks a major strategy shift for Nokia, which has previously equipped devices with its own open-share software. Analysts said the deal was a bigger win for Microsoft than Nokia, whose CEO Stephen Elop in a leaked memo this week compared his company to a burning oil platform with “more than one explosion … fueling a blazing fire around us.”
Nokia share price plummeted 14 percent to (EURO)7.00 ($9.52) in late trading in Helsinki.
The partnership will “deliver an ecosystem with unrivaled global reach and scale,” Nokia said, but warned that it would also bring “significant uncertainties” and it expects profit margins to be hit by strong competition from rivals.
Elop, a Canadian national, joined Nokia from a senior executive position at Microsoft last year. The first non-Finn to lead Nokia, he is under intense pressure to reverse the company’s market share losses to North American and Asian competitors.
“Nokia is at a critical juncture, where significant change is necessary and inevitable,” Elop said. He added the company was aiming at “regaining our smart phone leadership, reinforcing our mobile device platform and realizing our investments in the future.”
Elop warned of major restructuring which would result in more global layoffs, saying Nokia must “improve the speed and nimbleness and agility of the organization,” but gave no details.
Nokia is still the biggest handset maker but its market share has tumbled from 41 percent in 2008 to 31 percent at the end of 2010.
It has also lost its innovative edge in the fiercely competitive top-end sector and is virtually invisible – with a 3 percent share – in the world’s largest smart phone market, North America.
Apples’ iPhone has set the standard for today’s smart phones and Research In Motion Ltd.’s BlackBerrys have become the favorite of the corporate set. More recently, Google Inc.’s Android software has emerged as the choice for phone makers that want to challenge the iPhone.
Speaking to analysts in London, Elop declined to say when Nokia would introduce a new device running on Windows Phone. But he said Nokia won’t bury its own Symbian operating system or the new MeeGo platform that it is currently developing.
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More than 200 million phones, with 150 million more expected on the market, use Symbian technology, seen by some developers as clumsy and dated. At the end of last year it was surpassed by Android as the world’s No. 1 smart phone software, according to the Canalys research firm.
Microsoft CEO Steven Ballmer said the new partnership with Nokia would give them “more innovation (and) greater global reach.” The two companies will “collaborate closely on development … so we can really align and drive the future revolution of the mobile phone,” he said.
A key challenge will be to produce quality devices with a hip factor that helps position Windows Phone as an attractive alternative to iPhone or Android. in a market where image plays a central role.
Windows Phone 7, launched last year, has a lot of catching up to do both in the number of users and “apps” available for the phones.
Nokia said its input in the partnership will include areas “such as imaging, where Nokia is a market leader” and map services, while the new device will use Microsoft’s Bing search engine.
Neil Mawston from Strategy Analytics in London said Microsoft would benefit more from the partnership.
“In terms of expanding their distribution reach, this is a huge win for Microsoft,” he said.
For Nokia the deal leaves uncertainty about Symbian, which Mawston said he expects to be phased out within two years and “completely, or at least mostly, replaced by Windows Phone.”
Elop said Nokia will announce a new leadership team and organizational structure “with a clear focus on speed, results and accountability,” sending shivers of unease through Finland which prides itself on a company that grew from making paper and gum boots into a global high-tech leader.
Elop acknowledged the layoffs would also hit Finnish units, where most of Nokia’s research is carried out, but said there were no plans to move company headquarters from Finland.
Several hundred workers at Nokia’s Tampere unit in southern Finland left work early on Friday, in a demonstration of concern about their future.
“They are worried. They want the information (about possible layoffs) as soon as possible, but I don’t think it even exists yet,” said Kari Kiila, a union representative at the Tampere plant.
Nokia, which claims 1.3 billion daily users of its devices, said it hopes the partnership with Microsoft will lead to capturing the next billion users to join the Internet in developing growth markets.
Jyrki Ali-Yrkko, from the Research Institute of the Finnish Economy, said the partnership was “surprising.”
“The strengths will be in Microsoft’s strong position in various corporate solutions and server solutions, but its weakness is that Microsoft perhaps doesn’t have a broad, user-oriented group of developers like those around Android or Apple,” Ali-Yrkko said.
The Espoo-based company, near Helsinki, employs 132,500 people – 7 percent more than a year ago.
—
Online:
http://www.nokia.com
From seattletimes.nwsource.com
Apple iPhone Sales Increase as Android Soars in Smartphone Market
Feb 9th
Apple iPhone Sales Increase as Android Soars in Smartphone Market
0 comments Gartner reports worldwide Android smartphone sales rose almost 900% in 2010 as market share for the iPhone remained stagnant and Symbian fell hard
Worldwide sales of mobile phones reached a staggering 1.6 billion in 2010, according to a new Gartner report issued today, Wednesday 9th February. Year-on-year sales climbed 31.8%, fuelled by the growing success of smartphones which accounted for almost one-fifth of all mobile phones sold last year.
Android Invasion Continues with Symbian Ready to Fall
The biggest story of 2010 was the ongoing success of Google’s Android OS for smartphones, which accelerated to an 888% rise from 2009 to claim sales of over 67 million and a 22.7% worldwide market share of all smartphone sales. The Symbian OS from Nokia is now in its sights and Android is already on its way to being number one as it overtook sales of Symbian smartphones in the fourth quarter of 2010. This is also backed up by data from research firm Canalys whose own report issued at the end of January predicted Android to continue growing at least twice as fast as the smartphone market itself.
Despite an increase of over 30 million sales in 2010, market share for Symbian fell almost 7% to 37.6% as Nokia continued to struggle in the smartphone market. This share slid down further to just 32.6% in the fourth quarter of last year as Android outpaced the ailing OS in a greater range of devices from manufacturers like HTC, Motorola and Samsung.
Nokia also struggled in the worldwide mobile phone market as a whole. Despite a modest sales increase that kept it well ahead of its nearest rivals with more than a quarter of all mobile phone sales, its market share actually fell 7.5% as Symbian continued to lose out to more capable operating systems in the growing smartphone market.
Apple iPhone Sales Almost Double but Market Share Stagnant
Expansion into new countries and availability on more networks helped Apple increase sales of the iPhone by 87.2% to over 46 million, putting it less than a million units behind RIM and its BlackBerry brand. However, its focus on the high-end rather than the mass market meant that its share of the smartphone market only moved from 14.4% in 2009 to 15.7% last year.
Apple will likely still be pleased with their rising market share though, especially against BlackBerry smartphones which are available at a lower cost. Market share for the iPhone is set to increase further in 2011 as it becomes available on Verizon Wireless in the US and a new model is released. But RIM will be fighting to stay ahead of its rival and hoping that the release of the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet will create a halo effect that will push its smartphone sales up as well.
Microsoft Slides After Windows Phone 7 Launch
Despite launching its new smartphone OS in October, market share for Microsoft plummeted to just 4.2% as a result of almost three million fewer sales. This will come as a disappointment to Microsoft whose Windows Phone 7 OS has been generally well received and is supported by major manufacturers such as HTC and Samsung.
With overall sales of almost 300 million, the smartphone market continues to soar as more and more devices are introduced and their capabilities become increasingly enticing to consumers and businesses. But a report from Gartner in October also warned that there could be a significant impact on sales of high-end smartphones as a result of the growing number of seven-inch tablets so this remains a highly volatile market.
From www.suite101.com
Apple Behind Push for micro USB Charging Standard
Feb 1st
Apple Behind Push for micro USB Charging Standard
The International Electronics Commission, IEC, has recently announced that micro USB will be the universal mobile phone charging standard used. The surprise here is that Apple, known for pushing its own standards, is throwing its support behind the micro USB charging push.
Having a common charging standard will be beneficial for the environment as the same charger can be used as a user upgrades between different phones. Rather than dumping an old charger in a landfill, old chargers can be re-used or passed on and can find new purpose. According to the IEC:
“We all have drawers full of chargers that became obsolete as soon as we buy a new phone. Today, we have a truly operational global standard that will allow the industry to end this waste and significantly reduce environmental impact. This is something millions of consumers have been waiting for. I am proud that the IEC has managed to get the best possible technical solution in record time to the market.”
While the move is ecologically sound, it goes against Apple’s current business strategy of charging a licensing fee for its proprietary dock connectors. Third-party accessory makers who want to enter the iPhone, iPod, or iPad ecosystem would have to pay Apple a royalty for utilizing the dock connector in products such as speakers and docks.
However, the move to have a universal micro USB standard may not preempt Apple from continuing to deploy products with a dock connector. Apple may add micro USB as a charging solution, but may still utilize its dock connector to connect to third-party accessories like speakers and docks. That will allow users to more easily find chargers while on the road, but still allow Apple to profit from and provide a rich third-party hardware ecosystem that integrates with its mobile device.
Recent news of Apple backing the micro USB charging solution may help lend credibility to rumors of a second-generation iPad supporting a micro USB port.
Via: IntoMobile
Filed Under: Mobile
Tags: Apple, charger, connector, dock connector, ipad, iphone, iPod, micro-USB, universal charger, USB
From www.gottabemobile.com
