ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Mobile devices Toolkit

Symbian heads 'to top' of smartphone boom

Matthew Broersma ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 09 Jan 2004 16:10 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

The mobile phone industry will sell 150 million smartphones in 2008, 15 times this year's sales, with the Symbian OS leading the smartphone operating system market, according to a report published this week by ABI Research.

Mobile phone makers sold about 10 million smartphones in 2003, a figure that will quadruple this year and continue steady growth through 2008, ABI said on Wednesday. The figures are contained in the report Wireless Handset Software: The Evolution of OS and Middleware Solutions and Their Impact on Next Generation Wireless Devices.

Mobile phones have traditionally used software developed by the phone maker and closely tied to the phone's hardware, but that situation is being changed by the advent of smartphones, which generally use a standardised operating system provided by a third party. A related factor is the growing success of "middleware" such as Java on mobile phone handsets: this is low-level software that allows programs to be run on a variety of devices.

The firm projects that the Symbian OS, which grew out of the EPOC operating system originally used on Psion handheld computers, will win the most smartphone market share by 2008, largely because of wide support by mobile phone makers. Most major handset makers, including Nokia, Samsung, Siemens and Sony Ericsson, have licensed the Symbian OS and also own stakes in the company.

The Symbian OS' biggest appeal for handset makers and telcos such as NTT DoCoMo is the ability to customise the software's functionality and appearance, ABI said. "With increasing competition and high churn rates, operators have felt the need to differentiate their products," said ABI analyst Kenil Vora, in a statement.

Microsoft's Windows CE will remain in second place in four years' time, ABI said, mainly appealing to large businesses who want smartphones to act as an extension of the PC. The software is largely the same in functionality and look-and-feel regardless of the handset manufacturer, which should appeal to enterprise CIOs, ABI predicted.

Linux will be the third-biggest choice, according to the research, appealing to mobile phone makers such as Motorola who are uncomfortable with the dominance of either Microsoft or Nokia, Symbian's largest shareholder. The software is highly customisable and inexpensive, but is not as standardised as the Symbian OS, the report said, arguing that "fragmentation of Linux will continue to stagnate its growth."

Java has helped to make simple programs portable among non-smartphone handsets, with more than 100 million Java 2 Mobile Edition (J2ME)-enabled handsets shipped in 2003, according to ABI's figures, but the middleware "remains too fragmented to be mass deployed as a standard middleware among all devices." Qualcomm has signed up 20 network operators to deploy its Java alternative, called BREW, but so far no GSM network has come on board.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Kyocera

Did you find this article useful?
64 out of 118 people found this useful


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:




Featured Talkback

Put simply, what is the compelling reason to pay ~$200 extra for an Eee with Windows XP? A Windows Eee won't come with any useful applications and you'll have to buy anti-virus software to boot. The truth about low cost computing is that nobody really cares whether the machine is running Windows or Linux as long as its cheap, its easy to use and it works.

By: dogStar

Read full story:
Asus to ship 60 percent of Eee PCs with Windows XP

On The Road Blog

iPhone heaven/iPhone hell

Steve Jobs owes me nearly two hours of my life back. Or at least he would do if I wasn't so chuffed with the iPhone that finally became mine after a bum-achingly long period propped... More

3 comments

The App store spells death to Jailbrea...

I'd love to say that the quality of Apps on the Apple App store is so superior to those made for jailbroken iPhones that no one would bother jailbreaking anymore. However, this is definitely... More

6 comments

Lenovo debuts new small-business noteb...

With Intel and Vodafone along for the ride, Lenovo today launched a brand-new SL range of small-business-focussed ThinkPads, refreshed the T series (performance), R series (mainstream)... More

Post a comment

Discussions

1000030281 1000030281

Facebook Bans Firefox 3

Sunday 20 July 2008, 2:33 AM

1 comment
roger andre roger andre

SP3 Under Suspicion Again

Saturday 19 July 2008, 9:29 PM

2 comments