Android Invasion: The Next Phase Begins..

onthebottom

Never Been Justly Banned
Jan 10, 2002
40,550
23
38
Hooterville
www.scubadiving.com
Looks like that invasion is stuck on the beach in the US: http://photos.appleinsider.com/nielsen-100606-1.jpg

OTB

Apple's iPhone market share three times greater than Android in US

By Sam Oliver
Published: 10:50 AM EST

A new survey of U.S. smartphone owners found that 28 percent use a device running the iPhone OS, compared with just 9 percent on Google's Android mobile operating system.

The data released this week by Nielsen shows Apple as the No. 2 smartphone maker in a poll of 11,724 users. Apple gained 2 percent in market share in the first quarter of 2010, compared with the previous quarter. The top smartphone, Research in Motion's BlackBerry, lost 2 percent in the same frame to sit at 35 percent.

Apple is ahead of Windows Mobile, which had a 19 percent market share in the first quarter, down 2 percent from the previous quarter. Google's Android came in fourth, with 9 percent. Palm took fifth with 4 percent, Linux sixth with 3 percent, and Nokia's Symbian came in seventh in the U.S> with 2 percent.

The study found that both Android and iPhone users are mostly male, but those on Android are typically younger, less wealthy and less educated. The survey discovered that 28 percent of Android users earned more than $100,000 a year, while 40 percent of iPhone users were in that income bracket. The average for all smartphones has 34 percent of users earning six-figure salaries.

Both iPhone and Android users are extremely loyal to their brands. Nielsen found that 80 percent of iPhone users want their next device to run the same operating system. Similarly, 70 percent of Android users said they will stick with Android for their next device.

The rest of the competition falls far behind, with just 47 percent of BlackBerry users looking to stick with a Research in Motion handset. And 34 percent of Windows Mobile users said they would stick with the same operating system in their next phone.

But Android users are also twice as likely to try the iPhone than iPhone users are likely to try Android. Among those surveyed, 14 percent of Android users said they would switch to an iPhone, while 7 percent of iPhone users said they would buy an Android device instead.

The Nielsen data shows Apple with an even greater lead over Android than the AdMob data released in late May. That study found that iPhone OS devices are twice as large as Android in the U.S., and 3.5 times greater globally.

The data shows that use of the iPhone has persisted in the market, helping Apple to keep its commanding lead over Android, even as sales of Android devices have grown significantly. Last month, the NPD Group declared that Android phones, available on a variety of devices and on multiple carriers, were collectively outselling Apple's iPhone in the U.S.

Last week, Nielsen released a "State of Mobile Apps" survey, which found that Apple had a vast lead in the mobile application market. That survey of more than 4,200 people found that iPhone users had an average of 37 applications, which was significantly more than the 22 applications had by Android users.
 

WoodPeckr

Protuberant Member
May 29, 2002
46,948
5,751
113
North America
thewoodpecker.net
Fark iPhome and all the rest!

LMFAO!!!!!
Skype does all I need and Skype is practically FREE!!!!.....
 

AnimalMagnetism

Self Imposed Exile
Apr 21, 2006
3,744
0
36
Toronto
Looks like that invasion is stuck on the beach in the US
you might want to rethink that OTB

Android Gaining in Mobile Web Consumption

A new report from online data analytics firm Quantcast has some Android fans cheering. The numbers show just how much the landscape is changing. On the surface, it looks like a win for Apple, who's iOS has a nearly 60% share of mobile data consumption. Android meanwhile is down at a little under 20%.

When tracking the total market share of each OS, Apple has taken a hit over the last 18 months, while Android is making big gains. The iOS platform was up around 75% share in mobile web traffic in January 2009. Now it's below 60%. Android was barely at 5% last January, having now made it to nearly 20%. The story behind the data relates to the types of devices out there.

Android is still mostly just found on phones. What tablets there are don't make up much of the market. Apple's iOS on the other hand, isn't just on iPhones. There are also millions of iPods and iPads that run the same OS. Quantcast tracked 8.7 million Android devices in the US. There are about 18.3 million iOS devices out there, but only 10.7 million iPhones. So of course the numbers look a little skewed. It's going to be quite a ride as we see if the iPhone 4 can fend off the little green robot.

 

JEFF247

New member
Feb 23, 2004
1,816
2
0
Finger Lakes, NY
www.XXXand.US
My sister just got an iPhone, because her son thinks they're cool. I HATE it. I'm sure it's a nice phone but AT&T sucks!! Shitty reception and dropped calls. I talked to her last night and I wanted to say "never call me on this fucking phone again." I didn't, I'm a good brother.

On Verizonwireless.com, they say I have to wait a month to get my Android HTC Incredible because of demand.
 

ig-88

New member
Oct 28, 2006
4,729
4
0
IIRC, AT&T doesn't allow tethering with an iPhone.

Verizon, when I checked, wanted an extra $50/mo for it with an Android.

As for Android vs. iPhone, well, more people will buy what is trendy, even though it may be an inferior product.

Like movies: an action movie will be a blockbuster, while a drama with themes will not.
 

onthebottom

Never Been Justly Banned
Jan 10, 2002
40,550
23
38
Hooterville
www.scubadiving.com
you might want to rethink that OTB

Android Gaining in Mobile Web Consumption

A new report from online data analytics firm Quantcast has some Android fans cheering. The numbers show just how much the landscape is changing. On the surface, it looks like a win for Apple, who's iOS has a nearly 60% share of mobile data consumption. Android meanwhile is down at a little under 20%.

When tracking the total market share of each OS, Apple has taken a hit over the last 18 months, while Android is making big gains. The iOS platform was up around 75% share in mobile web traffic in January 2009. Now it's below 60%. Android was barely at 5% last January, having now made it to nearly 20%. The story behind the data relates to the types of devices out there.

Android is still mostly just found on phones. What tablets there are don't make up much of the market. Apple's iOS on the other hand, isn't just on iPhones. There are also millions of iPods and iPads that run the same OS. Quantcast tracked 8.7 million Android devices in the US. There are about 18.3 million iOS devices out there, but only 10.7 million iPhones. So of course the numbers look a little skewed. It's going to be quite a ride as we see if the iPhone 4 can fend off the little green robot.

I think you're reading this wrong..... while Google market share is growing Apple had only one way to go from 80% as did Google from 5%. No news hear other than Apple still has dominant market share.

As for the diversity of devices, yes Apple has a much more robust strategy (touch, iPad, iPhone) for both mobile browsing and gaming than does Google... turning that into a phone war weakness is silly.

Good news, Google will give Apple some much needed competition because RIM and Windows have failed at that.

OTB
 

WoodPeckr

Protuberant Member
May 29, 2002
46,948
5,751
113
North America
thewoodpecker.net
Kids

Bottom line I have NO NEED for any of that crap....opps I mean toys you listed above.....
 

onthebottom

Never Been Justly Banned
Jan 10, 2002
40,550
23
38
Hooterville
www.scubadiving.com
Bottom line I have NO NEED for any of that crap....opps I mean toys you listed above.....
Yes, these are tools for us who leave our homes and work.....

Surfing porn in your basement on a 13yr old PC is more your style...

LOL

OTB
 

WoodPeckr

Protuberant Member
May 29, 2002
46,948
5,751
113
North America
thewoodpecker.net
Kids!

Yeah right!
The touch, iPad, iPhone are soooo needed. You forgot to throw in the iPod....
 

AnimalMagnetism

Self Imposed Exile
Apr 21, 2006
3,744
0
36
Toronto
And the beat goes on.....

Google Activating 160,000 Android Devices Every 24 Hours


Google rolled the dice when it gambled it could compete in the mobile OS market, and as it turns out, they were right. Speaking in an interview with a CNBC television network, Google chief executive Eric Schmidt said the number of Android devices shipping each day now tops 160,000.

"Everybody is gong to be on mobile devices all the time, every day, unless they're asleep," Schmidt said. "Everything is moving to mobile and we're participating in it. We have more than 160,000 of these things shipping globally every day. The momentum is phenomenal."

Phenomenal is right. It was only a month ago that Schmidt told investors some 65,000 Android-powered smartphones were shipping each day, though he said the actual number might be even higher.

If Schmidt's figures are correct, then Android handset shipments now outnumber those of Apple's mighty iPhone, which was pegged at 8.75 million for the last quarter.

source http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/google_activating_160000_android_devices_every_24_hours
 

onthebottom

Never Been Justly Banned
Jan 10, 2002
40,550
23
38
Hooterville
www.scubadiving.com
Ahem.....

By Slash Lane
Published: 03:50 PM EST

More people are browsing the Web via an iPad than on an Android-powered device, according to new monthly browser usage data from one analytics firm.

In just three months on the market, Apple's iPad has come to represent 0.17 percent of all Web browser traffic tracked by Net Applications. The iPad's June total managed to exceed Android, which represented 0.14 percent of all Web browsing traffic.

Behind both of them was another iOS-powered device from Apple, the iPod touch. In June, the iPod touch took 0.12 percent of the Web browser share, according to Net Applications.

The iPad has seen a steady climb since it was released in April, notching 0.03 percent in the first month, when it was only available in the U.S. In May, the numbers tripled to 0.09 percent, only to nearly double again in June to the 0.17 percent figure that pushed it past Android.

The numbers, however, do not mean that there are more iPads on the market than Android devices. But the stats do indicate that a far higher percentage of iPad owners use their new device to browse the Web -- so many, in fact, that it has now surpassed Android in that department.

Released in early April in the U.S., the iPad immediately made a splash in the statistics tracked by Net Applications. In less than two weeks in the market, it had already tied Android and BlackBerry in Web browsing presence, but only for a few days. This week's totals show that the iPad has grown to a level where its browser was consistently larger than Android's through the month of June.




Last month, Apple's most high-profile iOS device, the iPhone, was revealed by Net Applications to carry a 33 percent share of all mobile browsers. That compared to 14 percent for Nokia's Symbian, 6 percent for Google Android, 4 percent for Research in Motion's BlackBerry, and 3 percent for Microsoft's Windows Mobile.


OTB
 

WoodPeckr

Protuberant Member
May 29, 2002
46,948
5,751
113
North America
thewoodpecker.net
Yawn.....
 

AnimalMagnetism

Self Imposed Exile
Apr 21, 2006
3,744
0
36
Toronto
Ahem.....

By Slash Lane
Published: 03:50 PM EST

More people are browsing the Web via an iPad than on an Android-powered device, according to new monthly browser usage data from one analytics firm.

In just three months on the market, Apple's iPad has come to represent 0.17 percent of all Web browser traffic tracked by Net Applications. The iPad's June total managed to exceed Android, which represented 0.14 percent of all Web browsing traffic.

Behind both of them was another iOS-powered device from Apple, the iPod touch. In June, the iPod touch took 0.12 percent of the Web browser share, according to Net Applications.

The iPad has seen a steady climb since it was released in April, notching 0.03 percent in the first month, when it was only available in the U.S. In May, the numbers tripled to 0.09 percent, only to nearly double again in June to the 0.17 percent figure that pushed it past Android.

The numbers, however, do not mean that there are more iPads on the market than Android devices. But the stats do indicate that a far higher percentage of iPad owners use their new device to browse the Web -- so many, in fact, that it has now surpassed Android in that department.

Released in early April in the U.S., the iPad immediately made a splash in the statistics tracked by Net Applications. In less than two weeks in the market, it had already tied Android and BlackBerry in Web browsing presence, but only for a few days. This week's totals show that the iPad has grown to a level where its browser was consistently larger than Android's through the month of June.




Last month, Apple's most high-profile iOS device, the iPhone, was revealed by Net Applications to carry a 33 percent share of all mobile browsers. That compared to 14 percent for Nokia's Symbian, 6 percent for Google Android, 4 percent for Research in Motion's BlackBerry, and 3 percent for Microsoft's Windows Mobile.


OTB
who cares that iPads, iPods and iTouch are surfing more than Android phones? isn't that the purpose of those things? lol
take those out of the equation and compare iPhone to Android phone and it's a much different picture, one that you know will soon be dominated by Android

 

onthebottom

Never Been Justly Banned
Jan 10, 2002
40,550
23
38
Hooterville
www.scubadiving.com
who cares that iPads, iPods and iTouch are surfing more than Android phones? isn't that the purpose of those things? lol
take those out of the equation and compare iPhone to Android phone and it's a much different picture, one that you know will soon be dominated by Android

I'm not sure of that as I'm also not sure that a single device (smart phone) is the best strategy.... These numbers illustrate not only how much iPad users take advantage of this device (this post being written on my iPad) but how limited the use is of the Android platform....

As I've said many times I think competition here is a good thing for all of us.

OTB
 

AnimalMagnetism

Self Imposed Exile
Apr 21, 2006
3,744
0
36
Toronto
JavaScript Performance in Android 2.2 Beats iOS4 by a Mile

Google began rolling out Android 2.2 "Froyo" to customers last week, and users are seeing a big speed boost in the web browser. The combination of the new just-in-time (JIT) compiler and V8 JavaScript engine give Google's mobile browser the title as the fastest you can get.

This estimation is based on benchmarks of JavaScript rendering. There is more to the speed and usability of a browser than raw JavaScript performance, but much of the work loading a page can be chewing through JavaScript. Overall, Android 2.2 is about three times faster than the previous 2.1 browser. When compared to iOS4, Android managed twice the performance in the SunSpider benchmark, and three times faster for the V8 bench.

It's good to see Apple get some real competition in this space. For a long time Mobile Safari was out in front of the pack. We hope to see both companies continue to push the envelope to deliver a better mobile browsing experience.

source http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/javascript_performance_android_22_beats_ios4_mile
 

AnimalMagnetism

Self Imposed Exile
Apr 21, 2006
3,744
0
36
Toronto
Android Gains, Apple Wanes -- Oh Yes, Yet Again
Don't look now, Apple fanatics, but Android's just made another noteworthy leap in mobile market share.

Google's Android platform grew by 44 percent from February to May, according to a report released Thursday by ComScore. During the three-month period from December to February, Android commanded an average of 9 percent of the U.S. smartphone market. In the next three-month period, from March to May, it had shot up to an average of 13.

Now, it goes without saying that 13 percent is still a relatively small piece of the pie. But the overall trends are what we're watching here -- and, gauging by a wide range of data from numerous sources, Android is showing consistent growth at a pace its competitors can't match.

Android and the Smartphone Market
For anyone who keeps an eye on mobile market trends, the pattern is quickly becoming familiar: In most time periods, and by most measures, Android makes a healthy jump, RIM shows signs of slipping, Microsoft takes a hit, and Apple stays steady or experiences a modest drop.

In the case of the latest data from ComScore, Apple lost about 4 percent of its U.S. market share, falling one point to 24.4 percent. Of course, these were the months leading up to the release of Apple's iPhone 4, so it's no big shock that sales were slow. Even following the launch of the iPhone 4, though, I'd be surprised if we saw any massive surge in Apple's relative share.

Here's the thing: Apple's iPhone is a single device, on a single carrier. Android, meanwhile, is an open platform with numerous devices on every carrier. (I know, I know -- the iPhone might be coming to Verizon. But we've heard that rumor confidently stated plenty of times before. At the present moment, it isn't a reality. Even if and when it becomes one, we're still talking about a single device on two carriers vs. dozens of devices on all carriers.)

Merits of one platform over another aside, the math tells you everything: No matter how magical and/or revolutionary Apple's products may be, we're looking at a game of numbers. That's why, when considering market share data last month, I declared that Apple had fallen and couldn't get up. By that, I'm not implying that Apple is doomed or even performing poorly; obviously, the company is doing quite well and showing no signs of struggle. What I'm saying is that when it comes to relative market share, the odds are simply stacked against it; the iPhone suddenly starting to grow at a faster rate than Android seems highly unlikely.

(For the purposes of this story, we won't even get into the Windows Mobile part of the equation. I'm personally still mourning the death of the Kin, anyway.)

Battling the Android Army

All right, so what about the iPhone 4? Will it suddenly shoot Android into oblivion and help Apple regain its position as the de facto standard? I wouldn't hold your breath.

Yes, Apple sold a lot of new iPhones in those first weeks. But it only makes sense that most of those early buyers were diehard iPhone fans who, by the very nature of their fandom, already owned iPhones. As I've pointed out previously, dropping one iPhone and picking up another has no impact on the overall market split.

The reality is that new high-profile Android handsets are hitting store shelves practically every month -- handsets like Motorola's Droid X and the multicarriered Samsung Galaxy S -- and those are attracting an awful lot of new customers. Last month, Google said it was activating 160,000 new Android devices every day, and that was before the Droid X had even been announced. Older Android handsets are slowly but surely starting to receive the Android 2.2 upgrade, giving them fresh life as well. In order to reverse the shifting market share trends, Apple's iPhone 4 would have to outpace the growth of that entire ever-expanding fleet of Android phones.

Even if the iPhone 4 didn't require a Jedi voodoo grip in order to work, that'd be one hell of a feat to achieve. Factor in those reception issues -- not to mention the iPhone 4's other reported problems -- and it'd take a full-blown miracle for Apple to fend off Android's gains.

I'm not sure any device is quite that magical.

source http://www.pcworld.com/article/200727/android_gains_apple_wanes_oh_yes_yet_again.html
 

onthebottom

Never Been Justly Banned
Jan 10, 2002
40,550
23
38
Hooterville
www.scubadiving.com
So how many cheap google phones does it take to leap to 60% of Apples single product market share?

Why is it that the just releases iPad has the same web traffic as all those google phones, because they are cheap and don't do much.....

To miss the obvious story in the above, that M$ has fallen off the cliff shows your obsession.

I do think the new Android products will give Apple a run for it's money (well, not it's money as I'm quite sure it's ecosystem and margins will shame all the no-name Android hw makers) but at least a run for market share.

I think it will be a three horse race, Apple, Google and RIM..... Of those three I'd say RIM has the most to lose and the weakest value proposition.

OTB
 

Powershot

Active member
May 18, 2003
2,059
1
38
Any news on a tier one (HP, Dell etc) Android tablet (iPad competitor) release date and pricing? Looking forward to seeing one in action.
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts