Report: Android will leapfrog the iPhone by 2012

Thu Oct 8, 2009 10:02AM EDT

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Watch out, iPhone—Android's nipping at your heels.

Researchers at Gartner (via AppleInsider) are predicting that the global market share for Google's Android mobile OS could overtake the iPhone's in a little over two years, with Android poised to leapfrog Apple into the No. 2 spot.

That would leave the iPhone in the No. 3 position—right where it is now, behind BlackBerry and Nokia's Symbian OS, according to Gartner. The industry researchers believe that by 2012, Research in Motion (the company behind the BlackBerry) will have lost 7 percent of its market share, causing it to slip into fifth place (behind even Windows Mobile). Android, meanwhile, will get a 12.9-percent boost to become the No. 2 smartphone platform in the world, with Symbian still safe in the No. 1 spot (with a dominating, although dwindling, 39 percent of the global market).

Those are just analyst predictions, of course, and two years is an eternity in the wireless world; after all, two years ago today, we were still getting used to the first iPhone.

That said, I think the gist of Gartner's prediction—that Android is poised to take the wireless market by storm—is spot on, and we've seen evidence of that in the past few months and weeks.

Google's open-source Android platform—which boasts one of the finest touchscreen interfaces out there, iPhone included—came slow out of the gates in fall 2008 with the solid, if uninspiring T-Mobile G1. We had to wait almost a year for the next Android phone in the U.S., but we finally got one this past August with the G1's follow-up, the HTC-made myTouch 3G (also on T-Mobile).

Soon after, what started as a trickle quickly became a flood. Sprint trotted out its first Android phone, the eye-catching, touchscreen HTC Hero, and then T-Mobile followed suit with the Motorola Cliq, its third Android handset ... followed by the Samsung Behold II just a few days ago. On Tuesday, Verizon Wireless announced it would launch a pair of Android phones before the end of the year, while Sprint announced its second Android phone—the Samsung Moment—a day later. Oh, and now there's rumors that Dell wants in on the Android action, with a new handset possible slated for iPhone carrier AT&T.

Let's see, that's ... one, two, three, four ... five new Android phones in in the past few months, with two more—and possibly even a third—due by the end of the year, from two (or maybe three) different manufacturers and three (possibly four) carriers. Some will be better than others, but consumers will have plenty of models (and carriers) from which to choose.

Of course, a bunch of new phones on the market doesn't mean diddly unless someone buys them, and for now, Apple has a solid 10.8- versus 1.6-percent lead over Android in terms of global smartphone market share. But Apple is the only company making iPhones, while the open-source (and high-quality) Android platform is available to all manufacturers and carriers—and from what we've been seeing, they're taking the ball and running with it.

Related:
Multi-phone Android platform seen overtaking iPhone by 2012 [AppleInsider]

 

Comments on Report: Android will leapfrog the iPhone by 2012

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  • 1 Posted by w_h_e_r_e_are_y_o_u on Thu Oct 8, 2009 2:27PM EDT Report Abuse

    I need to use my iPhone *TODAY*… why should I worry about 2012 and beyond???? Besides… do you buy cell phones based on what *YOU* like and need… or based on “what is popular with other people”????

  • 3 Posted by chriscondiff on Thu Oct 8, 2009 11:18PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is a stupid article. How the heck can you guess or assume what the I-Phone will be in 2012.. What an advertisement.. Worthless article.

  • 4 Posted by d2innovation on Thu Oct 8, 2009 11:22PM EDT Report Abuse

    "Market share" doesn't really matter to Apple. To Apple, it's not about just the software, like Microsoft, or hardware, like Motorola. It's about total use experience. What it matters to Apple is iPhone be the best in total experience. It matters if iPhone adds value to the brand and increases its value to sharehold. Just compare Nokia, Motorola, and Apple's stock performance. If it happens to be the number 1 in market share, that's icing on the cake. So many people (especially those so called "experts") were skeptical about the iphone (even iPod) when it was anounced, only from thechnology or feature point of view. We all know what happened.

  • 5 Posted by ahachie@rogers.com on Thu Oct 8, 2009 11:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    Until the iPhone gets flash (and im an iphone owner) it might as well be obsolete already.

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