There isn't much doubt about the observation that Apple iPhone users surf the mobile Web more than users of other smart phones. Net Applications, for example, reported that, after five months on the market, the Apple iPhone had browser market share 33 percent greater than that of Windows Mobile devices, despite the vastly-larger installed base of those devices.
The accomplishment? In less than six months, Apple passed Microsoft’s 10-year-plus mobile platform in terms of browser use, and installed base of about 20 million devices.
So has that behavioral pattern continued? Seeking Alpha writer Ram Krishnan says it has. "I charted the browsing market share of both iPhone and Windows Mobile over six quarters," he says. "Clearly, iPhone is continuing its dizzying ascent, widening its lead significantly over Windows Mobile."
"The market share today stands at four times that of Windows Mobile," says Krishnan. "At this rate, given iPhone 3G’s worldwide distribution, it is quite conceivable that iPhone/iPod will be the fourth largest computing platform in terms of browsing market share (behind only Windows XP, Windows Vista, MacIntel and Mac OS) by end of this year."
Krishnan points out that iPhone will have surpassed the browsing market share of Linux, Windows 2000 and Windows NT platforms.