iPhone OS Still Tops, but Android, WebOS Are Gaining Share
An AdMob report on mobile phone use around the world shows the iPhone reigns, the Palm Pre's WebOS and Google's Android are on the rise and Indonesia is the third-biggest source of smartphone traffic.
AdMob, which measures handset use rather than sales, by analyzing data from
ad requests, impressions and clicks, served up its August
smartphone OS data in a Sept. 30 report that points out both expected and
noteworthy findings.
The Apple iPhone OS' share of the smartphone operating system worldwide market
grew from 33 percent in February to 40 percent in August, AdMob found. (AdMob
noted that it didn't include the iPod Touch in this ranking because, despite
running the Apple OS, it isn't a phone.) Android also showed growth from
February to August, from 2 percent up to 7 percent, and the newly
arrived WebOS on the Palm Pre grabbed 4 percent of the market share.
Meanwhile, Research In Motion's operating system share fell from 10 to 8
percent, Windows fell from 7 to 4 percent and the Palm OS fell from 3 percent
to a near-extinct 1 percent.
Which devices are accessing the mobile Web and applications?
During the month of August, the top four handsets to do so were the iPhone, the
iPod Touch, the Samsung R450 and the HTC
Dream. The top four smartphones were the iPhone, the Dream, the Pre and the RIM
BlackBerry 8300.
In the United States,
judging by ad requests from the OS, the iPhone represented 50 percent of
smartphone use, followed by RIM BlackBerrys with 14 percent of the pie and
Android devices with 13 percent. In a respectable fourth place came WebOS
phones, with 9 percent.
"Android continues its strong growth in both North America
and Europe. Ad requests from Android devices grew 17
percent month over month in August, following a 50 percent increase in
July," wrote an AdMob representative identified only as "Mike"
on the site's post introducing the data. "Given the new devices launching
in [the fourth quarter], it could be a huge holiday season for the Android
platform."
Outside of North America, Nokia handsets top the smartphone
lists, and AdMob pointed out that "Nokia's new touch screen devices-the
N97 and XpressMusic-are both gaining traction and were the No. 4 and 5
smartphones in Western Europe." AdMob also sees encouraging
growth from the Pre, though concedes, "this is just one month of data and
we'll continue to monitor it."
Where in the world is all the smartphone traffic coming from? AdMob found 46.5
percent of ad requests came from the United
States, followed by India
with 6.2 percent of requests. Perhaps surprisingly, the third position goes to Indonesia,
which saw 5.5 percent of requests, and the fourth, fifth and sixth positions
respectively go to the United Kingdom,
the Philippines
and Mexico.
The results of AdMob's April data can be read
here.









