The smartphone boom is in full swing, with twice as many sales last quarter as in the same period last year, according to new research from Gartner.
IT research firm Gartner says worldwide mobile phone sales grew by 35 percent overall in the third quarter of 2010 (as compared to the third quarter of 2009), mainly fueled by white-box (hardware-only) phone sales in emerging markets such as India, Russia, and Africa, as well as a 96 percent increase in smartphone sales. It’s a gold rush right now, with plenty of winners and losers–let’s take a look at five of the big takeaways from Gartner’s research:
It’s a good time to be a Droid
Market share isn’t everything
Larger market share generally means more brand recognition and popularity–but it can be a misleading measure of how certain phones are doing. While Apple lost 0.4 percent of the market over the last year, it sold twice as many phones. Research in Motion (RIM) lost 5.9 percent of the market, but continues to gain subscribers and revenue. Symbian, on the other hand, saw the second-largest sales increase of any smartphone OS–more than 11 million units sold–but still lost 8 percent o the total market share.
Windows Mobile 6.5 was not terribly popular
What happened to WebOS?
You know the outlook is bleak for HP and Palm’s WebOS when it doesn’t even have its own category in Gartner’s press release. This means it’s either part of the “Linux” category (with 2.1 percent market share), or the “Other” category (with 1.5 percent of the market share). HP had better have more ambitious plans than the Palm Pre 2 if it hopes to resurrect WebOS as a viable smartphone OS competitor.