 Handsets like the Motorola Droid propelled Google to a tremendous market share gain, putting it within striking distance of third place competitor Microsoft. (Source: AP)
Google jumped from 3.8 percent of the market in November 2009 to 9.0 percent in February 2010
A
note to smartphone manufacturers: watch your back.
Google's
Android smartphone operating system is doing
quite well in the market, posting an incredible 236 percent
growth in market share between November 2009 and February 2010,
according to recently
released metrics from market research firm ComScore.
That
gain catapulted the open smartphone maker from 3.2 percent of the
market to 9.0 percent of the market, sending it leaping over Palm
into fourth place. Speaking of Palm, the company's
slide continues as it shed 1.8 percent market share,
dropping from 7.2 percent to 5.4 percent.
Google's gains were
fueled in part by the launch of the advanced Motorola Droid and HTC
Nexus One handsets, which brought multi-touch to Android at
last.
The picture isn't pretty for Microsoft either, who has
to endure the agonizing wait for Windows
Phone 7. Microsoft was the biggest loser for the quarter,
dropping from 19.1 percent to 15.1 percent. That big loss means
that with one more big quarter Google could pass Microsoft and move
into third place.
Apple also posted a surprising loss as it
awaits the release of the fourth generation iPhone this summer, which
is rumored to bring
an HD screen to the popular device. The loss was
minimal -- Apple shed 0.1 percent, dropping from 25.5 percent to 25.4
percent of the market.
Still, it marks a reversal of a long
growth trend for Apple. Apple has cause for concern with
Android, as illustrated by its recent
litigation against Android handset maker HTC, which its
suing to try block all phone imports. Apple's biggest asset is
its 150,000 apps, but Droid's app library is rapidly expanding, and
it now has 30,000 apps of its own.
RIM, meanwhile enjoys a
healthy lead thanks to its loyal legion of business users. The
Blackberry maker remains somewhat aloof to the Apple-Microsoft-Google
war that's developing below. RIM's marketshare grew slightly
over the quarter, jumping from 40.8 percent to 42.1 percent of the
market.
"Intel is investing heavily (think gazillions of dollars and bazillions of engineering man hours) in resources to create an Intel host controllers spec in order to speed time to market of the USB 3.0 technology." -- Intel blogger Nick Knupffer
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