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Half of Mobile Users to Be Web-Enabled by 2013
According to Nielsen, smartphones were used by 25% of the US mobile phone audience in Q2 2010, up from 23% the previous quarter and 16% in Q2 2009. The research firm predicts they will overtake feature phones by the end of 2011. This increased ownership of smart devices is driving growth in mobile internet usage. The acceleration of this trend has led eMarketer to raise its forecast relative to the estimates released in November 2009. According to eMarketer projections, 85.5 million mobile users will access the web from their mobile devices in 2010, versus 83.5 million in the previous forecast. In 2013, penetration will reach the halfway mark, and by 2014, 142.1 million users, representing 53.9% of the US mobile user population, will access the internet using mobile browsers or applications. http://www.emarketer.com/Article.aspx?R=1007858
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Nokia says no to Android
FierceDeveloper's Jason Ankeny just published an interesting article on Nokia's ongoing rejection of Google's open source mobile OS Android. Read it on the FierceDeveloper website or just down below: The worldwide smartphone market posted 64 percent annual growth during the second quarter according to research firm Canalys--Apple (with shipments up 61 percent year-over-year), Nokia (up 41 percent) and Research In Motion (also up 41 percent) all contributed to the jump, but the biggest difference maker was Google, as shipments of devices running its Android mobile OS increased a staggering 886 percent over the previous year. Last week, Google CEO Eric Schmidt said sales of Android smartphones now total about 200,000 a day. "People are finally beginning to figure out how successful Android is," Schmidt said at the inaugural Techonomy conference in Lake Tahoe, Calif., adding that Android device sales totaled about 100,000 per day just two months earlier. "It looks like Android is not just phenomenal but incredibly phenomenal in its growth rate. God knows how long that will continue." Android sales remain some distance behind Nokia (NYSE:NOK), however--the handset maker still controls 38 percent of the international smartphone market, shipping a record 23.8 million Symbian smartphones in Q2, Canalys reports. The Symbian Foundation adds it shipped over 27 million devices last quarter, translating to almost 300,000 devices shipped each day (or 207 per minute or more than three per second, if you prefer). Although Nokia will continue to employ Symbian across its lower-end handsets, the company said in June that its forthcoming N8 device heralds the last N-series smartphone running the OS--moving forward, Nokia will instead rely on MeeGo, the Linux-based operating system combining its Maemo effort with Intel's Moblin platform. But given Android's breakout success and its role in reviving the fortunes of rival device manufacturer Motorola, some pundits are asking why Nokia doesn't embrace Android as well. Not gonna happen, according to Nokia executive vice president Niklas Savander: In an interview with Engadget, Savander said the company has no plans to introduce an Android device. "We fundamentally believe in our capability to add value on top of just producing great hardware," Savander said. "And so, you have to build something different. And so, in a way, then it's just the question of, do we believe that we can be better or more efficient in differentiating by picking up Android versus something like MeeGo. So, it becomes almost a technical question. Now, of course, the other thing that we factor in is that Android is run by Google, and that just means that potentially it's much more in their hands. We're not prepared to hand over our destiny to a third party on that one. So, it is, of course, hard to justify whether that's relevant or not, but having 40 percent market share of the smartphones, we think that we need to have a bit of a say in the platform." So Nokia remains committed to MeeGo--will developers follow suit? A recent survey published by cross-platform development solutions provider Appcelerator suggests otherwise. Ninety percent of developers say they are very interested in creating applications for Apple's iPhone, 84 percent express comparable enthusiasm for the iPad and 81 percent are casting their lot with Android. On the other hand, 34 percent of developers tell Appcelerator they're very interested in writing BlackBerry apps, a number that slides to 27 percent for Windows Phone 7, 15 percent for Symbian, 13 percent for webOS and just 11 percent for MeeGo. The scheduled release of Nokia's first MeeGo device later this year should fuel developer interest, but even so it's going to be difficult for Nokia to attract their attention--after all, it seems like everyone's mind is on Android. Everyone except Nokia, that is.
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Mobile Gains Momentum with European Travelers
Rapid advances in mobile technology have introduced a new medium for consumers to interact with travel companies, and the results are quickly becoming evident among European travelers, says a new study issued by the leading US travel industry research company PhoCusWright. In the U.K., France, and Germany, more than 90% of travelers plan to carry mobile phones with them while traveling in the upcoming year, according to PhoCusWright's European Consumer Travel Report. And while travel-related mobile activities are still relatively uncommon among travelers across the markets, these activities show strong indicators for growth in the coming year. In these three markets, usage of mobile devices for travel-related activities is likely to double in the next year. For the complete article pls. visit the PhocusWright website.
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25% of US mobile subscribers now own a smartphone
Android overtook iPhone in new sales for H1, but BlackBerry may be under pressure Smartphones now account for 25% of all US mobile subscribers, according to The Nielsen Company. That's up from 16% a year ago. What's more, Nielsen has predicted that smartphones will overtake feature phones in the US by the end of 2011. This is in terms of install base - not just new quarterly sales. Nielsen has also broken down the share of all smartphones by OS, with RIM in the lead on 35%, followed by iPhone (28%), Windows Mobile (15%) and Android (13%). Android is rising fast, and looks set to overtake WinMo next quarter. In fact, Nielsen says Android took a 27% share of new smartphones bought in the first half of this year in the US, behind only RIM's 33%, and ahead of iPhone's 23%. Read more here: http://www.mobile-ent.biz/news/38027/25-of-US-mobile-subscribers-now-own-a-smartphone
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Australia: Mobile internet usage getting ready for smartphone invasion
The number of mobile internet users in Australia will experience year-on-year growth of 26% between 2009 and 2010, with 5.14 million mobile internet users by the end of this year, according to data released by mobileSQUARED. More than 56% of the users will be on smartphones, including iPhone users, which alone contribute 21% of browsers. Between 2009 and the end of 2010, the number of iPhone and smartphone users browsing the internet will almost double. mobileSQUARED forecasts the number of mobile browsers using featurephones to steadily decline between now and 2015, as these users upgrade to smartphones. By 2015, the number of Australian users browsing on their mobile phones will top 11.1 million, with 69% of users on smartphones (including Android), while a little under a quarter (24%) will be using the iPhone. Interestingly, all smartphone categories will account for 68% of total mobile users in Australia by 2015. Read more here.
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