Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Android Sales Eclipse iPhone, Another Study Finds

Android phone sales have overtaken the iPhone in the North American market for the first time, Gartner found today. That is the second study conducted recently that suggests Android sales are overtaking Apple sales.

Thanks to a 906 percent surge in shipments worldwide to 5.21 million phones, Google's mobile OS outpaced Apple's in North America and the United States in particular.

Worldwide, Apple still comfortably outsold the combined Android platform, jumping from 10.5 percent of the market a year ago to 15.4 percent. Gartner however expects Android to overtake the iPhone before long as its worldwide sales grew six times larger over the same space of time, from 1.6 percent to 9.6 percent. Carolina Milanesi, Gartner VP, says the rapidly closing gap is an inevitable result of sheer scale.

"You have one vendor with one model and eight to nine vendors with many models -- of course you get bigger volumes," she said.

Most Android sales came from HTC and Motorola, which shipped 2.6 million and 2.3 million total smartphones each. Samsung has also been a significant contributor.

"In the first quarter of 2010, smartphone sales to end users saw their strongest year-on-year increase since 2006," said Carolina Milanesi, research vice president at Gartner. “This quarter saw RIM, a pure smartphone player, make its debut in the top five mobile devices manufacturers, and saw Apple increase its market share by 1.2 percentage points. Android’s momentum continued into the first quarter of 2010, particularly in North America, where sales of Android-based phones increased 707 per cent year-on-year.

In the smartphone OS market, Android and Apple were the winners in the first quarter of 2010. Android moved to fourth position, displacing Microsoft Windows Mobile for the first time. Both Android and Apple were the only two OS vendors among the top five to increase market share year-on-year. Symbian remained in the top position but continued to lose share, primarily based on its weakness at the high end of the market.

Smartphones accounted for 17.3 per cent of all mobile handset sales in the first quarter of 2010, up from 13.6 per cent in the same period in 2009.

Causeworld: Checking in a Good Cause

If you are going to "check in," check in for a good cause.

Causeworld: Checking in a Good Cause

If you are going to "check in," check in for a good cause.

Video Chat Behind Google Buy

Video chat probably is the top reason Google has bought Global IP Solutions.

Is Firefox Headed Towards A Massive Decline? Its Co-Founder Thinks So

It's hard to remember (and some never have known) a time when Google and Apple were upstart companies. But companies age, especially when they succeed.

Firefox was part of a "rag tag" open movement when it challenged the hold Microsoft’s Internet Explorer had in the browser market. When Mozilla began its assault, Internet Explorer had something on the order of 90 percent market share. Over the past five or so years, Microsoft's share has dropped below 60 percent, and Firefox has 25 percent to 30 percent share of the market.

But success has bred discontent is some quarters. At least some think Firefox is no longer the light, open alternative it once was.

Content Businesses Face Devaluation

If the music business is any indication, digital distribution of content goods is going to change the economics of most parts of the content business, including print and perhaps some parts of the video market as well.

In the print business, there arguably are other forces at work besides "free" online distribution of content. But the expectation of access to quality content online is "devaluing" professionally-produced content, which means there will be less of it produced.

The video market is better placed to resist the commodity pressures that have hit the music business and are now affecting the print content business as well.

The reason video will fare better is that production costs in the print and music businesses are lower than they are in the movie or TV business. It just is harder and more expensive for useful and usable content to be created in the movie and video domains, compared to the music and print businesses.

The point is that the advent of digital distribution has complex impact. In some industries, digital distribution "only" changes distribution channels. Music, TV and news moves from plastic discs and paper to Internet distribution, for example.

In other businesses it undermines the historic business ecosystem. In the print and music business, the revenue and cost structures of producing content are changed.

Android Battery Life Victim of Open Approach

"Open and standards-based approaches to creating products are the industry norm, and generally result in faster development times and lower retail prices. But there sometimes is a price. Because it does not take the "open" approach, Apple is able to optimize performance of its hardware and software.

Conversely, open platforms such as Android are not able to take an end-to-end view, all the time. And that seems to be playing out with complaints of limited Android battery life, presumably from users who have downloaded many, or some particular applications.

Google CEO Eric Schmidt himself has taken the liberty to suggest that some of the third party applications offered through the Android Market are not completely efficient at resource management, thus requiring more power from an Android smartphone than they might otherwise need.

As with most other aspects of software and hardware development, there are trade-offs to be made. Android trades control for development speed, lower cost and diversity. Apple trades maximum third-party software development for better user experience.

Will Generative AI Follow Development Path of the Internet?

In many ways, the development of the internet provides a model for understanding how artificial intelligence will develop and create value. ...