Verizon Wireless now offers not one but two smartphones featuring Googles Android: the Motorola Droid and the HTC Droid Eris. While the move is expected to be a win for all parties, Motorola is most in need of a success.On Nov. 6, Verizon Wireless officially joined the competitive fray
surrounding Googles Android mobile operating system. The U.S. carrier launched
not only the
Motorola Droida $199.99 hopeful
iPhone competitor with a dedicated keyboard and Android 2.0but also the HTC
Droid Eris, a $99.99 smartphone running Android 1.5 and relying solely on
the virtual keypad on its 3.2-inch capacitive touch screen.
The announcements are wins for the carrier, which early
reviews by The New York Times and the Wall Street Journal have described as
offering reliable and blazingly fast service: for Google, whose services
are deeply integrated within the phones, and particularly Motorolas Droid, which
offers free turn-by-turn navigation via Google Maps; and especially for
Motorola, which is in need of a boost. Once the No. 2 market share holder in
the global handset market, Motorola ranked in fifth in the third quarter of
2009.
Analysts are hopeful, however, that the Droid may reverse Motorolas fortunes.
Droid is potentially a game changer for Motorola, said Tina Teng, a senior
analyst with iSuppli, in a statement. Motorola now is no longer just
emphasizing slick form factors, such as it did with its RAZR handset. The
company now has focused on the hottest segment of the global mobile handset
marketproviding compelling smartphone products that are usable and expandable
through third-party applications.
With the Droid, Motorola has also capitalized on the trend toward smartphone
widgets, which allow users to customize products according to their own
personality, Teng said.
Similarly, Strategy Analytics analyst Neil Mawston, in an Oct. 30 report on
mobile handset shipments in the third quarter, wrote in regard to Motorola, We
believe the future outlook is brightening.
Though Motorola shipped 13.6 million handsets during the quarter, down from
25.4 million a year earlier, Mawston explained, Motorolas
cost base has been streamlined, and its high-end handset portfolio has been
strengthened. Motorola announced two Android smartphones, the Droid and the
Cliq, and unveiled its complementary, social networkingfocused MotoBlur
service.
The Cliq, which arrived on the T-Mobile network Nov. 2, additionally runs
Android, which iSuppli expects to enjoy the fastest growth in usage of any of
the smartphone [operating systems].
iSuppli anticipates that shipments of Android will, by 2013, rise by 118
percent from 2008 levels. While in 2009 it accounts for just 2.4 percent of the
total smartphone OS market, by 2013 its expected to hold 9.1 percent of the
global market share, boosting it from seventh placeor, last placeto fourth
place.
Android is licensed by seven major handset OEMs, including Samsung, LG,
Motorola and Sony Ericsson, which iSuppli partly attributes to its growth,
along with the support it has from eight global wireless operators.
Analyst Roger Kay says confidence in Google is another contributor to Androids
expected success. If you look at the Android world, an important piece of it
is that it leverages Googles back end. You have some very strong backbone
services right there, he told eWEEK.
And though developers are attracted to the platform, and the number of apps in
Googles Android Market has exceeded those of all competitors except the
leaps-and-bounds-ahead Apple, Kay said that Android is somewhat unlike the
others, in that its not quite so dependent on developers.
At the very end, it has to be about the experience, and if Google can offer a
good experience, and theres every evidence that they can, then that can
overcome a lot of other issues.
In a statement introducing the Droid, Sanjay Jha, co-CEO
of Motorola and CEO of Motorola Mobile
Devices, remarked, Were proud to work with Verizon Wireless and Google on the
first smartphone to feature Android 2.0. [Droid] delivers a rich consumer
experience with warp-speed Web browsing, a mammoth screen, and Motorolas
expertise in design and voice quality."
He continued, "Combined with Androids open, flexible graphical user
interface and the power of Verizon Wireless 3G network, Droid is a smartphone
that simply doesnt compromise.
Both the Droid and Droid Eris are now available at the Verizon Website, as
well as at retailers such as Best Buy.