Showing posts with label pre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pre. Show all posts

2009-03-12

Smartphone Market Shares & Growth

World market leader Nokia had a bruising 2008, at least in the smartphone field. According to a study, the Finns' market share in this segment dropped by 10% to a - well - still fairly respectable 40.8% in Q4/2008 (as compared to 50.9% a for the quarter in the previous year). Painful!


The big winners were RIM (growth of 84.9% year-on-year), Apple (111.6%) and Samsung (138%) although the latter grew from a fairly low share (1.8%). HTC was up 20% but its carrier-branded handsets (T-Mobile G1, etc) were not listed under its own tab but under "others", so there might actually have been more (probable when considering that the company's profits rose sharply in Q4/2008 on G1 sales).

Apple, interestingly, is said to have suffered a fall of sales during Q4/2008 with growth in that quarter driven by the Blackberry Storm, T-Mobile G1 and strong Samsung sales. On the OS side, Windows Mobile made headway, mainly via the successful HTC Touch line and the Samsung Omnia.

Overall smartphone sales in Q4/2008 were 38m and 140m for the whole year. This seems to tie in roughly with the numbers I discussed earlier this month.

The changes are of interest to the content industry, too. Smartphones make for a disproportionate amount of content consumption, and smartphones also lead the way for the new app stores that are breaking through everywhere after Apple showed its competitors just how much consumers are craving content. RIM is out of the blocks, as is Android. Nokia announced its Ovi Store and runs similar programmes with N-Gage, NCD and Comes with Music already and Windows Mobile has just announced the shop it will launch itself. Remains to be seen where Palm will go with its Pre and WebOS: it only had 0.9% of the market (some faithful Treo users!) and hence lots of catching up to do. And what about the newly coined JavaFX?

Here are the charts (courtesy of Gartner via Cellular News) for 1) Q4 2008 by vendor, 2) all of 2008 by vendor, 3) Q4/2008: by operating system and 4) all of 2008 by OS:

Worldwide: Smartphone Sales to End Users by Vendor

(Thousands of Units)

Company4Q08 SalesMarket Share4Q08 (%)4Q07 SalesMarket Share4Q07 (%)4Q07-4Q08 Growth (%)
Nokia15,561.740.8%18,703.350.9%-16.8%
RIM7,442.619.5%4,024.710.9%84.9%
Apple4,079.410.7%1,928.35.2%111.6%
HTC1,631.74.3%1,361.13.7%19.9%
Samsung1,598.24.2%671.51.8%138.0%
Others7,829.720.5%10,077.327.4%-22.3%
Total38,143.3100%36,766.1100%3.7%


Worldwide: Smartphone Sales to End Users by Vendor, 2008

Company2008 SalesMarket Share 20082007 SalesMarket Share 2007Growth
2007-2008
Nokia60,920.543.7%60,465.049.4%0.8%
RIM23,149.016.6%11,767.79.6%96.7%
Apple11,417.58.2%3,302.62.7%245.7%
HTC5,895.44.2%3,718.53.0%58.5%
Sharp5,234.23.8%6,885.35.6%-24.0%
Others32,671.423.5%36,176.629.6%-9.7%
Total139,287.9100%122,315.6100%13.9%

Worldwide: Smartphone Sales to End Users by Operating System, 4Q08

Company4Q08 SalesMarket Share 4Q08 4Q07 SalesMarket Share 4Q07Growth
4Q07-4Q08
Symbian17,949.147.1%22,902.562.3%-21.6%
RIM7,442.619.5%4,024.710.9%84.9%
Windows Mobile4,713.912.4%4,374.411.9%7.8%
Mac OS X4,079.410.7%1,928.35.2%111.6%
Linux3,194.98.4%2,675.97.3%19.4%
Palm OS326.50.9%449.11.2%-27.3%
Other OSs436.91.1%411.31.1%6.2%
Total38,143.3100%36,766.1100%3.7%

Note: The "Other OSs" category includes sales of Sharp Sidekick devices based on the Danger platform.

Worldwide: Smartphone Sales to End Users by Operating System, 2008

Company2008 SalesMarket Share 20082007 SalesMarket Share 2007Growth
2007-2008
Symbian72,933.552.4%77,684.063.5%-6.1%
RIM23,149.016.6%11,767.79.6%96.7%
Windows Mobile16,498.111.8%14,698.012.0%12.2%
Mac OS X11,417.58.2%3,302.62.7%245.7%
Linux11,262.98.1%11,756.79.6%-4.2%
Palm OS2,507.21.8%1,762.71.4%42.2%
Other OSs1,519.71.1%1,344.01.1%13.1%
Total139,287.9100%122,315.6100%13.9%

Note: The "Other OSs" category includes sales of Sharp Sidekick devices based on the Danger platform.


2009-01-09

Finally: a new Palm

After bloody ages (and 425m Elevation dollars later) Palm came out with a bang yesterday at CES by unveiling the Pre and its new WebOS. Palm's shareholders will be chuffed as the stock surged in the hours afterwards. Now, what is it? And does it have legs? One of the first reports (even containing a minute-by-minute live-blog of the presentation) notes that

'its form factor is a blend of the HTC Touch and the iPhone. The software looks an awful, awful lot like that of the iPhone — multitouch, gestures and so on. Many of the apps also have a very strong likeness to the iPhone [...]."
That in itself is of course not a bad thing. And other reports confirm high hardware quality and nice UI. However... Aren't they a bit late? And where will the content come from? Palm used to have a faithful following on his Tungsten and Treo product lines but this is a while ago now and there have been some awesome devices in the interim, some of which - most notably the iPhone and the G1 as well as RIM's Blackberries and the higher-end Nokia devices - have amalgamated a great device with a great UI and commercial environment into a huge following. Apple AppStore, Android Market, N-Gage and Ovi, Blackberry Application Center, etc, are all there or there about. And Palm will be up against that. The fact that it has - at least initially - tied itself to Sprint only will not be much help there.

WebOS is said to be easy to develop for. Allegedly HTML, CSS and some other stuff known from the web would be enough to develop for it. But will anyone do it unless there is a device base large enough to make it a compelling commercial case (which even seems to hit platforms like Nokia's N-Gage; THQ has just apparently dropped its "Worms World Party" development for this).

It's nice to see they're back but I think that the jury is still out on the success of this.