Android Shipments Rise Sharply In US

Google’s Android platform shipped on 43 percent of US smartphones in the second half of 2010, topping Apple iOS and RIM BlackBerry

Google’s Android operating system continued to be the hit of the US smartphone world, accounting for 43 percent of smartphone shipments from July 2010 to December 2010.

Nielsen said on 1 February that Apple iOS comprised 26 percent of smartphones shipped over the last six months, whole Research in Motion’s Blackberry tallied 20 percent of platform shipments.

Statistical tie

However, while Android has been the hot handheld platform after a strong holiday season of Samsung Galaxy S and Motorola Droid sales, the OS is locked in a statistical tie with iOS and Blackberry: all account for 27 percent of the US smartphone market.

Technically, Nielsen is showing a slight edge for iOS at 28 percent share, but the research calls this a tie, allowing for fluctuations in market numbers and error.

Nielsen’s numbers came one day after Canalys published its fourth quarter smartphone shipments across North America, Asia Pacific, EMEA and Latin America and found Android became the world’s leading smartphone platform.

The OS accounted for 33.3 million of the 101.2 million smartphones shipped worldwide in Q4, compared to 31 million by Nokia, which is struggling to keep pace with Google and Apple in the competitive market worldwide.

Sales figures

Apple sold 16.2 million iPhones, while RIM, which finds its smartphone leadership position squeezed in the US market by the iPhone and Android handsets, followed Apple with 14.6 million units shipped.

Adding more fuel to the Android fire, eMarketer analyst Noah Elkin said on 27 January that Android will account for 31 percent of all smartphone users by 2012, with iOS following close behind at a 30 percent market share.

“With a growing roster of manufacturer and carrier partners in every major market and market segment, scale for Android is coming quickly in terms of device, market share, apps and ad revenues,” Elkin said.