In the most bullish estimate for Google’s Android platform yet, Gartner said the open-source operating system would grab 49 percent worldwide market share by 2012.
That compares with IDC and ABI Research’s estimates that Android will capture 45 percent market share in the next four to five years.
Gartner said Android would finish 2011 with 38.5 percent share and would significantly grow its share the following year as handset makers slash prices to sell more smartphones. This would result in more Android phones in the sub-$100 range, particularly outside the United States and Europe, where Android is not already a large player.
Apple’s iOS will fade to the number two position, with 19.4 percent share through 2011 and 19 percent share in 2012 on the strength of sales in the United States and Western Europe. However, Gartner reasoned, iOS market share would peak because, unlike Android phone makers, the company will seek to maintain margins rather than cutting new-product prices to gain market share. This will continue to limit adoption in emerging regions.
In third place, Research In Motion (RIM) will see a decline in its share, from 16 percent in 2010 to 13.4 in 2011 and 12.6 percent in 2012, as the Blackberry-maker finds itself squeezed by Android, iOS and Windows Phone in the consumer and business markets. Gartner said it factored-in RIM’s migration from the BlackBerry OS to the QNX operating system for its PlayBook in 2012, bringing more advanced features than the current BlackBerry OS to boost its attractiveness in consumer and business markets.
Nokia, which is phasing out its Symbian platform in favour of Microsoft Windows Phone 7, will push Windows Phone to nearly 11 percent market share by 2012, and to nearly 20 percent by 2015. Windows Phone should edge RIM BlackBerry by 2013, and Apple’s iOS by 2015, the researcher said.
For those who thought media tablets such as Apple’s iPad or Android slates would eat away at smartphone share, think again. Gartner analyst Carolina Milanesi said these new devices would widen ecosystems, driving sales. She believes those who own iPhones, Android handsets or RIM Blackberries could turn to buying iPads, Motorola Xooms or PlayBooks to pair with their devices to port their apps to a larger computing screen.
More broadly, Gartner said that the average selling price of smartphones would come down to $300 (£183) or less, without contract, and worldwide smartphone sales would reach 468 million units in 2011. Looking further ahead, smartphone sales will surpass the billion mark by 2015, comprising 47 percent of the total mobile-device market, the research firm forecasts.
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