Apple iPhone OS Tops Smartphone Market, Report Argues
Did you know that the top five smartphones accessing Wi-Fi networks are the
iPhone, the iPod
Touch, the Sony PSP, the HTC Dream and
the HTC
Dash? Or that 24 percent of U.S.
ad requests on smartphones are made over a Wi-Fi network?
These numbers come courtesy of AdMob and its April Mobile Metrics Report. While
Gartner and other research companies report the numbers of devices bought and
sold, AdMob, which tracks ad requests, impressions and clicks, is tuned in to
who's using what and how.
"While Gartner estimated that global phone smartphone sales represented 12
percent of total device sales in 2008, 35 percent of AdMob's worldwide ad
requests in April 2009 came from smartphones," stated the AdMob report,
released May 27. "This means that smartphones accounted for nearly three
times more mobile Web usage than their device market share."
In March, Gartner ranked smartphone market share by operating system using handset
sales, attributing 52 percent of the market to Symbian, followed by
Research In Motion's BlackBerry line with 17 percent market share, Microsoft
Windows phones with 12 percent and the Apple iPhone with 8 percent.
In April, AdMob also ranked smartphone market share by operating system, but in
terms of mobile Web and application usage, and found that the iPhone claimed 43
percent of the market share, followed by Symbian with 36 percent, RIM with 9
percent and Windows with 5 percent.
AdMob reported that owners of
smartphones running the Symbian and RIM operating systems favored mobile
Websites over HTML sites, but the reverse was true for iPhones and phones
running Google's Android operating system.
Comparing its mobile Web and application data with data provided by Net
Applications, which collects mobile browsing data from devices that render HTML
pages and JavaScript, AdMob reported that the iPhone OS, while holding only 8
percent of the smartphone market share, generated 43 percent of mobile Web
requests and 65 percent of HTML usage.
Android, similarly, accounted for less than 1 percent of smartphones sold in
2008, but generated 3 percent of mobile Web usage.
The complete report is available for download on the AdMob site.
