From: John Navas on
Online tracking firm Quantcast has just released new data that shows
mobile operating systems' current market share in North America, with
the newly renamed "iOS" (originally called "iPhone OS" - the OS powering
the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch) in the lead...by miles. The Apple
mobile OS dominates its competitors with a huge chunk of mobile market
share, at 60%.

But don't let these numbers fool you. It's not how much or how little of
the mobile landscape each OS has claim to, but how fast this picture has
changed over the preceding months. The real winner here is Android, the
OS whose rapid gains have come at Apple's expense.

Only 20% for Android?

The latest stats - 58.8% for iOS, 19.9% for Android - may be a bit of an
initial letdown for Android fanboys who didn't read through the whole
report. (And yes, Google's mobile operating system now has its own
fanboys too, sporting a level of fanaticism once seen only among those
who bought Apple products.)

Android has just 20% market share? What? When there are 8.7 million
Android handsets here in the U.S. compared with 10.7 million iPhones?
Shouldn't the numbers be a bit closer? Well, if you were only comparing
mobile phones to mobile phones, they would be.

In this case, though, Quantcast is comparing mobile operating system
market share and that means counting the web surfing done by both the
iPod Touch and the iPad, too. Combined with the iPhone device count,
you're looking at 18.3 million unique "iOS" devices. And the iPad is
built for Web browsing.

Now, whether or not we should even be counting the iPad when talking
about "mobile" market share is a debate for another day (are tablets
more computer than mobile handheld?). Today, the big takeaway from the
report shouldn't be the numbers themselves, rather how they've changed.

When it Comes to Growth, the Winner is Android

As the Quantcast blog post explains, "the biggest winner is clearly
Google's Android." How can this be?

The fact is that Google's mobile OS has climbed rapidly over the prior
months, having gone from around 5% in January 2009 to 20% in May 2010,
stealing away market share from other mobile OS's, most notably Apple's,
whose iOS dropped from 75% share to 59% during that same time frame.

MORE:
<http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/android_steals_market_share_from_iphone.php>

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Best regards,
John

If the iPhone and iPad are really so impressive,
then why do iFans keep making excuses for them?