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   Android Marks Fourth Anniversary Since Launch with 75.0% Market Share in Third Quarter, According to IDC
01 Nov 2012
 The Android smartphone operating  system was found on three out of every four smartphones shipped during  the third quarter of 2012 (3Q12). According to the International Data  Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, total  Android smartphone shipments worldwide reached 136.0 million units,  accounting for 75.0% of the 181.1 million smartphones shipped in 3Q12.  The 91.5% year-over-year growth was nearly double the overall market  growth rate of 46.4%.
   "Android has been one of the  primary growth engines of the smartphone market since it was launched in  2008," said Ramon Llamas, research manager, Mobile Phones at IDC. "In  every year since then, Android has effectively outpaced the market and  taken market share from the competition. In addition, the combination of  smartphone vendors, mobile operators, and end-users who have embraced  Android has driven shipment volumes higher. Even today, more vendors are  introducing their first Android-powered smartphones to market."
   "The  share decline of smartphone operating systems not named iOS since  Android's introduction isn't a coincidence," said Kevin Restivo, senior  research analyst with IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker.  "The smartphone operating system isn't an isolated product, it's a  crucial part of a larger technology ecosystem. Google has a thriving,  multi-faceted product portfolio. Many of its competitors, with weaker  tie-ins to the mobile OS, do not. This factor and others have led to  loss of share for competitors with few exceptions."
   Mobile Operating System Highlights.
   Android,  having topped the 100 million unit mark last quarter, reached a new  record level in a single quarter. By comparison, Android's total volumes  for the quarter were greater than the total number of smartphones  shipped in 2007, the year that Android was officially announced. Samsung  once again led all vendors in this space, but saw its market share  decline as numerous smaller vendors increased their production.
   iOS was a distant second place to Android, but was the only other mobile  operating system to amass double-digit market share for the quarter. The  late quarter launch of the iPhone 5 and lower prices on older models  prevented total shipment volumes from slipping to 3Q11 levels. But  without a splashy new OS-driven feature like Siri in 2011 and FaceTime  in 2010, the iPhone 5 relied on its larger, but not wider, screen and  LTE connectivity to drive growth.
   BlackBerry's  market share continued to sink, falling to just over 4% by the end of  the quarter. With the launch of BlackBerry 10 yet to come in 2013,  BlackBerry will continue to rely on its aging BlackBerry 7 platform, and  equally aging device line-up. Still, demand for BlackBerry and its  wildly popular BBM service is strong within multiple key markets  worldwide, and the number of subscribers continues to increase.
   Symbian posted the largest year-on-year decline of the leading operating  systems. Nokia remains the largest vendor still supporting Symbian,  along with Japanese vendors Fujitsu, Sharp, and Sony. Each of these  vendors is in the midst of transitioning to other operating systems and  IDC believes that they will cease shipping Symbian-powered smartphones  in 2013. At the same time, the installed base of Symbian users will  continue well after the last Symbian smartphone ships.
   Windows  Phone marked its second anniversary with a total of just 3.6 million  units shipped worldwide, fewer than the total number of Symbian units  shipped. Even with the backing of multiple smartphone market leaders,  Windows Phone has yet to make a significant dent into Android's and  iOS's collective market share. That could change in 4Q12, when multiple  Windows Phone 8 smartphones will reach the market.
   Linux  volume declined for the third straight quarter as did its  year-over-year growth. Samsung accounted for the majority of shipments  once again, but like most other vendors competing with Linux-powered  smartphones, most of its attention went towards Android instead. Still,  that has not deterred other vendors from experimenting, or at least  considering the open-source operating system, as multiple reports of  Firefox, Sailfish, and Tizen plan to release new Linux-based experiences  in the future.













 
 
 
 
 
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