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Friday, April 8, 2011

Android Will Rule The Smartphones, Windows Phone 7 Will Be Second, Says Gartner

According to the analysts over at Gartner, Android will be the most popular mobile OS in the next four years reaching almost 50 per cent market share. Meanwhile Windows Phone will catch up and overtake the second place from iOS by 2015 with 20 per cent market share.

This is what the latest Gartner's report predicts. Quite expectedly the Symbian market share is shrinking rapidly, while those of Android's and Windows Phone will go up.
Apple's iOS will have the second place by the end of 2012, but Microsoft will overtake it by 2015. It seems both Android and iOS will lose some users in favour of Windows Phone. It's predicted that when this happens Apple will change its pricing policy in order to maintain its share.

RIM will also have a user withdrawal when its migration from BlackBerry OS to QNX, the OS behind the Playbook, starts in 2012 (we are not sure we have heard of those plans before).
It seems there will be two major changes in the next four years - Android will be the king of the mobiles (eating the Symbian pie), while the Microsoft-Nokia cooperation will push the Windows Phone up to the second place. It seems logical, but we will wait and see how things will turn up.
We already saw quite similar predictions in the IDC report a week ago. There are a few minor differences into the distribution of shares (a but smaller Android share and a bigger Windows Phone one in 2015), but both reach to the same conclusion - Android will be the biggest player in 2015 and Windows Phone will beat iOS for the second place.
Another thing that is worth mentioning is we could expect doubled smartphones sales in 2012 (compared to 2010).
It seems Gartner also did not foresee any major players entering the smartphone market. Just like the IDC report, the Gartner's one also does not see Bada OS as a major player in the next four years. Another think that pops in mind is they think Apple will sit back and stay calm when it's losing market share. What we are trying to say is there are just too many variables and not all of them were taken in consideration. So these predictions might apply in some version of our world, but can not be a reliable source in our dynamic life. 

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