Google Android Will Grow 900 Percent in 2009, Analysts Say
By: Michelle Maisto
2009-05-11
Article Rating:    / 11
Google’s Android mobile OS is expected see a growth rate of 900 percent in 2009, Strategy Analytics is predicting in a new report. The Apple iPhone OS will follow behind it, as the second fastest-growing smartphone OS, and the RIM BlackBerry is also in good shape, as the second-largest overall smartphone OS in the U.S. in 2008.
Google’s Android operating system is expected to grow by 900 percent in
2009, encouraged by vendors, developers and operators, a May 11 report from
research firm Strategy Analytics is predicting.
The report, “Global Smartphone Vendor Market Share by Region: 2008,” breaks
down smartphone market growth by region and operating system.
“The Android
mobile operating system from Google gained early traction in the United States
in the second half of 2008 and it is gradually spreading its presence into Europe
and Asia during 2009,” wrote Tom Kang, the author of the
report, in a statement.
Kang additionally expects the iPhone OS to grow 79 percent in 2009—outpaced only
by Android, which is expanding from a lower user base.
Neil Mawston, director at Strategy Analytics, also remarked in the statement
that Android’s “relatively low-cost licensing model, its semi-open-source
structure and Google’s support for cloud services have encouraged companies
such as HTC, Motorola, Samsung, T-Mobile,
Vodafone and others to support the Android operating system. Android
is now in a good position to become a top-tier player in smartphones over the
next two to three years.”
Despite
the global economic climate, global smartphone shipments reached 152
million units in 2008, and Kang’s report states Asia Pacific is still the
biggest market for smartphones, followed by North America
and then Western Europe.
Core markets for Symbian have been sluggish Kang additionally writes, but the
RIM BlackBerry has also seen success, pulling ahead of Microsoft Windows Mobile
to become the second largest smartphone OS in 2008.
 |
|