Banking giant JPMorgan Chase & Co is testing Apple devices for its staff who may want to use them for emailing, providing an alternative to the BlackBerry device for the first time, according to a Bloomberg report.
Google Android-based devices are also reportedly under consideration, according to two unnamed sources quoted in the article.
“This phenomenon is very new, and we expect it to put increased pressure on RIM’s performance,” Pierre Ferragu, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein, told Bloomberg, noting a survey the company did in August that found cost savings and employee preference represented the two biggest factors companies considered when making the switch. “BlackBerry isn’t the only alternative to offer employees mobile email.”
As the smartphone wars heat up again, Microsoft is also jumping into the fray with a bizarre PR stunt it pulled ahead of the launch of Windows Phone 7, its mobile OS. Some employees on the company headquarters’ campus held a mock funeral for the iPhone and BlackBerry, complete with procession, bagpipes, dancing to Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” and Darth Vader on a motorcycle. Windows Phone 7 is reportedly set to launch 11 October.
According to a Gartner research report, however, Android-powered smartphones are the ones to watch: Android-based devices could outnumber BlackBerry smartphones and iPhones by the end of 2010, and match Symbian sooner than expected, the report projected. The worldwide mobile operating system market will be dominated by Symbian and Android, as the two OSes will account for 59.8 percent of mobile OS sales by 2014.
“The worldwide mobile OS market is dominated by four players: Symbian, Android, Research In Motion and iOS,” said Roberta Cozza, principal research analyst at Gartner. “Launches of updated operating systems – such as Apple iOS 4, BlackBerry OS 6, Symbian 3 and Symbian 4, and Windows Phone 7 – will help maintain strong growth in smartphones in 2H10 and 2011 and spur innovation. However, we believe that market share in the OS space will consolidate around a few key OS providers that have the most support from CSPs and developers and strong brand awareness with consumer and enterprise customers.”
Gartner also predicted that by 2014 open-source platforms will capture more than 60 percent of the market for smartphones. Single-source platforms, such as Apple’s iOS and RIM’s OS, will increase in unit terms, but their growth rate will be below market average and not enough to sustain share increase. Windows Phone will be relegated to sixth place behind MeeGo in Gartner’s worldwide OS ranking by 2014.
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