Android Grows User Base Faster Than Apple iOS

Google’s Android operating system has seen more market share growth than Apple’s iPhone among smartphone subscribers over the last six months, according to new research from Nielsen.

Apple’s iOS currently holds a 28 percent smartphone market share, chasing Research in Motion’s Blackberry platform, which commands 35 percent of the market.

RIM hopes to advance its smartphone share with handhelds based its forthcoming Blackberry 6 platform, which is scheduled for a release later this year.
Apple launched its first iPhone more than three years ago and until recently has seen the most subscriber growth as it seeks to capture the U.S. smartphone crown from Research in Motion.

Apple iOS

While Android wields just 13 percent of the U.S. smartphone market overall, it edged past Apple’s iOS in the second quarter to grab a 27 percent share of those recent smartphone subscribers, Nielsen found. Blackberry lead with 33 percent of new subscribers.

Smartphones such as Verizon’s Droid line (the Motorola Droid, HTC Droid Incredible, and Motorola Droid X), the HTC Evo 4G and Google’s Nexus One gadget provided formidable competition to the iPhone 3GS and iPhone 4.

These handsets are all based on Android 2.1, and most of them are currently being upgraded to Android 2.2, which boasts enterprise capabilities and faster browser performance, among other perks.

Nielsen’s bullish Android numbers were backed up by Canalys, which said Android sported a stunning 886 percent worldwide shipment growth for Q2, and confirmed that Verizon’s Droid lineup has buoyed U.S. sales.

iPhone Most Desired

However, Nielsen found that the iPhone remains the most desired phone among those mulling a smartphone switch. Some 21 percent of current Android users and 29 percent of Blackberry owners are considering the move to the iPhone.

Overall, the iPhone and Android devices overall are carrying the U.S. smartphone market, according to Nielsen.

Devices that let users browse the Web, exchange e-mail, pictures and videos and access all manner of applications now comprise fully 25 percent of the U.S. mobile market, up from 23 percent in the first quarter.

Clint Boulton eWEEK USA 2012. Ziff Davis Enterprise Inc. All Rights Reserved

Share
Published by
Clint Boulton eWEEK USA 2012. Ziff Davis Enterprise Inc. All Rights Reserved

Recent Posts

US Investigates Alphabet’s Waymo After Self-Driving Incidents

'Unexpected behaviour' of Waymo's self-driving vehicles triggers investigation by American safety regulators

12 hours ago

TikTok Creators Sue To Block US Divest Or Ban Law

Group of TikTok creators in the United States attempt to block recent law that will…

13 hours ago

Protestors Clash With Police At Tesla Gigafactory In Germany

Hundreds of climate activists clashed with police outside Tesla gigafactory near Berlin, in protest over…

15 hours ago

Google I/O: Google Gemini, Project Astra Etc

AI very much the focus at Google's annual developer conference, including Google Gemini and a…

15 hours ago

OpenAI Co-founder Ilya Sutskever Departs To Work On ‘New Project’

Co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever to leave OpenAI, after role in Sam Altman's firing…

19 hours ago

Biden Administration Imposes 100 Percent Tariff On Chinese EVs

Electric vehicles made in China are now subject to a 100 percent tariff, to protect…

20 hours ago