By Gartner’s account, forget Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Windows in the mobile o/s market. It is an Android thing. Gartner believes that Symbian and Android will account for nearly 60% (59.8%) of mobile operating system sales by 2014. Here is a table with the expectations by year:
| Mobile O/S | 2010e | 2011e | 2014e |
|---|---|---|---|
| Symbian | 40.10 | 34.20 | 30.20 |
| Android | 17.70 | 22.20 | 29.60 |
| Research In Motion | 17.50 | 15.00 | 11.70 |
| iOS | 15.40 | 17.10 | 14.90 |
| Windows Phone | 4.70 | 5.20 | 3.90 |
| “Other O/S” | 4.70 | 6.30 | 9.60 |
Don’t count Nokia Corporation (NYSE: NOK) out with Symbian, whether it has and needed a new CEO or not. Gartner noted that Symbian “will remain at the top of Gartner’s worldwide OS ranking due to Nokia’s volume and the push into more mass market price points.” Research-in-Motion Ltd. (NASDAQ: RIMM) is currently one of the key four players along with Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) and its iOS.
Gartner also continues to believe that new launches of updated operating systems (Apple iOS 4, BlackBerry OS 6, Symbian 3 and Symbian 4, and Windows Phone 7) will help maintain strong growth in smartphones in the second half of 2010 and 2011 and that these will continue to spur innovation. Gartner’s angle is that the overall market share in the operating system space will consolidate around a few key providers that have the most support from CSPs and developers and strong brand awareness.
The latest research is calling for a more rapid and budgetary device launch from companies like Samsung, Sony Ericsson, LG and Motorola
JON C. OGG