The Rise Of iOS And Android As Smartphone (Inforgraph)

April 12, 2012 by: 2
  • iOS-vs-Android
  • lookout-ios-android-timeline

Most of you following the news here at Redmond Pie can own a smartphone. In fact, I’d guess that every one of you own a device boasting options qualifying your cell for the “smart” moniker.

Apple is credited with shaping the market to its current state, and if one takes a look at all smartphones post-2007 – when the fruit company 1st introduced the original iPhone to the globe – it is not difficult to examine the huge impact and influence of the game-changing product. Google hopped aboard the gravy train back in 2009, and has not really looked back. With many hundred thousand daily activations of its mobile OS (as counted by Google Android Chief Andy Rubin), it’s become the foremost widely-used software on the mobile platform – even leaving Apple’s iOS in its wake.

Nowadays, a massive fifty % of U.S. mobile customers own smartphones, therefore the competition for supremacy is fiercer than it is ever been. Though Microsoft is preparing to made its mark someday later this year with the mobile version of its eagerly-awaited Windows eight, the Redmond-based software maker has struggled to form any sort of important impact since overhauling Windows Mobile, regrouping with Windows Phone seven.

Heavy collaboration with Finnish outfit Nokia, as well because the speculation of Windows eight tablets manufactured by ASUS render Windows eight an exciting prospect for each smartphone and tablet. For the time being, though, the main focus remains firmly on Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS – each of whom are proving to be catalysts within the ever-increasing reliance on digital merchandise.

Mobile security firm Lookout have created a rather fascinating infographic documenting the whole story of how iOS and Android came to be the forces of today – leaving scarcely a stone unturned:

The perhaps the foremost attention-grabbing nugget of information is the sheer number of projected iOS and Android activations (cumulatively) by the end of this year. With each camps boasting tens of billions of app downloads, expect the figures to continue growing exponentially – significantly with Apple showing to have moved its iPhone launch period in line with the vacation season.
Will Android – by providing a variety of devices – always remain on top? Leave your thoughts on our Facebook and Google+ pages

Soource : VentureBeat

 

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