Wednesday, October 6, 2010

ANDROID DEVICE Sales Soar - RIM and Apple Decline

 The following article compares various smartphones and other hand-held devices and concludes that Android's overall share of the U.S. smartphone market grew from eight percent to 19 percent during that period, putting it in third place, while Apple's remained basically the same from 29 to 28 percent and Research in Motion fell from 36 to 31 percent after an initial rise in February and March.
   . . . June

-----------------

Android Device Sales Soar as RIM and Apple Decline
Yahoo! News:Adam Dickter, Tue Oct 5, 4:57 pm ET

During the same period, Research In Motion's BlackBerry devices dropped from 34 percent to 26 percent of new sales, and Apple's iPhone dropped from 32 to 25 percent.


That period of time covers Apple's announcement of a new iPhone (with months of publicity about it) and one month of sales of the device. So the drop in Apple's sales is likely a result of consumers holding off purchases in anticipation of the iPhone 4.


"It's a common pattern, especially for Apple, for folks to hold off until the new updated device comes out," said Kirk Parsons, a senior wireless analyst at J.D. Power and Associates. "The news about a new device launch is announced months in advance, so it's human nature to wait until a new version comes out."


Between June, when the iPhone 4 was launched, and August, Apple's smartphone sales rose from 21 to 25 percent. But during that same period, Android sales took off at a greater rate, climbing from 26 to 32 percent, as smartphones such as Motorola's Droid X and Samsung's Galaxy were released.


Android's overall share of the U.S. smartphone market, including new adopters and previous users, grew from eight percent to 19 percent during that period, putting it in third place, while Apple's remained basically the same from 29 to 28 percent and Research in Motion fell from 36 to 31 percent after an initial rise in February and March. The data released Tuesday did not look at the share of smartphones running Microsoft's Windows Mobile, Palm's webOS, or Nokia's Symbian systems. 

The data contains "no surprises whatsoever," said Parsons. "Our data also suggests that folks that own an Android-based device have higher overall satisfaction than Apple, not counting the 4G version." 

The survey results were announced on the same day that AT&T and Motorola unveiled three new Android-based phones, the Bravo, Flipout and Flipside, which will make a total of eight Android options on the carrier's shelves. 

Read entire article

No comments:

Post a Comment