Android will take 15% of tablet market next year
- 19 November, 2010 04:24
- Comments
Not content to gobble up smartphone market share, the Android operating system is poised to capture 15 per cent of the tablet market in 2011, according to IMS Research.
IMS notes that at least 15 different suppliers are currently planning to sell Android-based tablets next year, including heavyweights such as Cisco, Dell, Motorola, Samsung, Acer, OpenPeak and Viewsonic. The firm also projects Android's share of the tablet market to steadily grow to more than 28 per cent by the end of 2015.
How Android conquered the mobile world in just three years
"The availability of Samsung's Galaxy Tab tablet via mobile carriers such as AT&T in the U.S. will quickly boost Google Android's presence in the tablet market," says IMS analyst Anna Hunt. "Even in the fixed-broadband ISP market, where the interface is typically customized to integrate the ISP's brand and services into the UI, hardware suppliers are offering Android models to allow ISPs to benefit from the quickly growing Android ecosystem."
Although Android has already been used as the operating system for tablets such as the Samsung Galaxy Tab, Google is working on a new version of the software that will be optimized for large-screen devices in ways that current versions aren't. Although Google hasn't yet set a release date for its tablet-centered Android, it will likely come out sometime next year after the company has released its Android 2.3 update, also known as "Gingerbread." Google and Verizon are reportedly teaming up to create an Android-based tablet that will be specifically tailored for Verizon's network and will presumably have a new version of Android if and when it is finally released.
IMS says that Android, Apple OS and Windows will dominate the tablet market next year, as the three operating systems will combine to take more than 92 per cent of total market share. The firm expects operating systems such as Research in Motion's tablet OS and HP's webOS platform to steadily chip away at the big three tablet platforms, as it projects their total combined market share will shrink to just over 80 per cent by 2015.
Over the past year Android has become a dominant player in the smartphone market. Since January alone, Android has doubled its total market share in the mobile operating system market, and devices based on Android accounted for a whopping 44 per cent of smartphones purchased in the third quarter of 2010, according to research firm ChangeWave. Research firm Gartner has projected that by the end of the year sales of Android devices will exceed those based on the BlackBerry OS and the iPhone OS, meaning that Android will trail only Symbian as the world's most-used mobile operating system.
Read more about data center in Network World's Data Center section.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
NBN build gaining momentum daily: Quigley
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Monday Grok: Will Siri crack the walls of GOOG?
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Award-winning unified information security from Clearswift.
Fully integrated web and email gateway security solution, providing - protection from inbound threats, policy based encryption, and data loss prevention. -
IDC Whitepaper: Generating Proven Business Value with EMC Next-Generation Backup and Recovery
IDC interviewd ten companies that have deployed EMC backup and recovery solutions, including EMC Data Domain and EMC Avamar. Some of the customers also had EMC NetWorker. The purpose was to identify and quantify the resulting business value of each project, in order to calculate a cumulative return on investment. Read on. -
Getting real about Virtual Backup and Recovery
Virtualisation continues to grow in popularity with real implications when it comes to backup and disaster recovery. Acronis compiles an annual survey of worldwide confidence in backup and disaster recovery. This year the survey has also thrown up a number of key global findings some of which are discussed further in this whitepaper, where we look at the continued spread of virtualisation, the implications in terms of backup and recovery.

















Comments
Post new comment