Thanks mainly to the new Lumia 900 and Nokia, Windows Phone could
represent nearly 17 percent of the smartphones shipped in 2015, edging
out Apple's iPhone for the second-place ranking behind Android
smartphones.
That's the view of analysts at IHS (formerly iSuppli) who are well aware
that Windows Phone made up only 1.9 percent of the market for all of
2011, with Apple's iOS at 18 percent and Android smartphones by all
makers at 47.4 percent. (Note: Apple's iPhone share surged to 44 percent in the fourth quarter, according to Nielsen and others.)
IHS said Thursday that Windows Phone will reach 16.7 percent of market
share in 2015, behind first-ranked Android at 58.1 percent and just
slightly ahead of iOS at 16.6 percent.
IHS said the introduction of the Lumia 900
running Windows Phone 7.5 (Mango) at CES last week showed Microsoft's
and Nokia's promise in smartphones. The Lumia 900 will be the first
Nokia device to run over fast 4G LTE and will be sold by AT&T in the
U.S. in the coming weeks. Pricing has not been announced.
Also, Nokia plans to sell the Nokia 900 to businesses through
Microsoft's business channels, taking advantage of a rich array of
business software built by Microsoft, IHS said. As such, Lumia 900 will
be competing against an entrenched base of BlackBerry smartphone users
in North America.
Microsoft's Mango interfaceThe
Lumia 900 is also rolling out first in North America, where Nokia has
traditionally been a weak player, IHS noted. It will help in the U.S.
that the smartphone has a large 4.3-inch Amoled touchscreen and a
12-megapixel camera, making it competitive with the best Android phones
on the market, IHS noted.
"The introduction of the Lumia 900 shows that Nokia believes the road
back to smartphone dominance runs through North America," Francis
Sideco, an analyst for HIS, said in a statement. "And the way to win
North America is through its operator channels."
"The Lumia 900 and its successors will help Microsoft to reclaim the
number 2 ranking in smartphone operating system market share in 2015,"
said Wayne Lam, another IHS analyst.
IHS realizes that Nokia won't be the only seller of Windows Phone
smartphones, but will still sell about half of all Microsoft OS-based
handsets in 2012. That percentage will rise to 62% in 2013, before
declining in 2014 as other manufacturers such as Samsung and HTC catch
up.
IHS also believes that Nokia, which is a well-established manufacturer
globally, will help lure app developers to the Windows Phone platform to
help expand its popularity.
By Matt Hamblen, Computerworld
By Matt Hamblen, Computerworld
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