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The Mobile Decade

January 4, 2010

The passing decade in the cellular market featured overwhelming growth in the penetration of mobile phones and outstanding breakthrough in their capabilities. Ten years ago, there were about 700 million mobile subscribers, while today there are about 4.6 billion, representing a global penetration rate of 67%. Out of the 1,136,401 mobile phones that were shipped in 2009 (according to Ovum estimations), 181,276 were smartphones, representing 16% of the global market. Most of these smartphones are equipped with a large TFT display (preferably touchscreen), 3.5G and WiFi connectivity, GPS, camera, Bluetooth and more. Smartphones today come with a variety of applications, such as a Web browser, email client, navigator and most importantly, an app store that allows the user to download applications that were developed by 3rd party developers.

The mobile phones of 2000 seem pre-historic in comparison with the modern smartphones of 2009. 10 years ago we had 2G phones, which enabled voice calls and SMS with limited interoperability between different networks. They had a small monochrome display which was capable of displaying few lines of text and simple graphics. They had few built-in applications, such as an alarm clock, calculator and primitive games (Snake!). These applications were provided by the device manufacturer and there was no way in which 3rd party developers could develop apps for these phones. Personal Device Assistant (PDA) represented a different class of mobile devices in those years. The popular PDAs, running operating systems such as Palm OS and Windows CE, offered an SDK for application developers. However, these devices were not connected to a wireless network, so the applications were bound to an off-line mode. During the course of the following years, mobile phones and PDAs have converged into smartphones.

In November 2000, Ericsson R380, the first Symbian phone was released. However, this phone was not open for 3rd party application developers. In the same year, Nokia introduced the 9210 Communicator. It was running Symbian OS 6.0 and was one of the first smartphones with an open operating system.

In 2001, another major breakthrough occurred with the announcement of the first GPRS phones. GPRS, a 2.5G cellular network technology, introduced packet switched data over GSM. It enabled mobile applications to access the internet through the cellular network. The first connected application was the WAP Browser, which initially provided limited access to the Internet, mostly within the walled garden of the operator.

In the same year, the first mobile phones with MIDP 1.0 were announced. These phones had a built-in Java Micro Edition (J2ME) run-time environment that enabled the development and deployment of applications for mass-market mobile phones. This technology changed the rules of mobile applications development, as developers no longer needed tight relationship with device manufacturers. The first deployments of J2ME-enabled phones were by non-GSM operators such as LG Telecom, NTT DoCoMo and Nextel. The first GSM phones with MIDP 1.0 included devices such as Motorola Accompli 008 and Siemens SL45i.

In 2002, Nokia introduced the first S60 phone, the 7650. This phone included new features that were not seen in the GSM market before, such as color display, VGA camera and MMS. It supported native application development with the S60 SDK as well as J2ME applications. In the same year, RIM introduced the Blackberry 5810. This was the first Blackberry device for GSM/GPRS networks. Originally a two-way pager, this device has evolved into a smartphone and quickly gained popularity, especially in the business sector. Another smartphone platform that has emerged at the same time was Microsoft’s Windows Mobile OS with the introduction of Orange SPV that was manufactured by HTC. This phone was running Microsoft Smartphone 2002, which was based on the Windows CE core and featured a removable SD card. Another platform that debuted in 2002 was Qualcomm’s BREW, which enabled the development of applications for BREW-enabled devices, mostly in the CDMA market.

In 2003, J2ME has been adopted by all major device manufacturers, while many mobile phones with MIDP 1.0 were introduced, especially in the GSM market. In the same year, mass market commercial 3G services were introduced, and enabled a wide range of mobile applications.

In 2004, J2ME has been upgraded with the introduction of MIDP 2.0. This was a major step forward, which opened new possibilities for application developers. One of the first phones that supported MIDP 2.0 was Motorola V600. In the same year, the first cellular phones with WiFi support were introduced. One of these phones was HTC Blue Angel that was released under several brand names.

In 2005, Motorola released the RAZR V3, the popular clamshell phone that sold more than 110 million units over the RAZR’s four-year run, and brought Motorola to second place in the mobile phone market behind Nokia. Unfortunately, Motorola failed to repeat this success and lost its market share dramatically during 2008.

In 2006, 67% of all smartphones shipped worldwide were running the Symbian OS, and most of them were Nokia’s S60 phones. In the same year, Nokia announced the N95, which became extremely popular since its release in 2007.

In 2007, Apple released the iPhone, and sold 6.1 million units over five quarters. Although these numbers are relatively small, the iPhone started a trend with its revolutionary multi-touch UI and swept the entire market. The iPhone SDK was officially announced in 2008, and allowed developers to develop native applications for the iPhone and iPod Touch. Apple has redefined the value chain by creating the App Store and allowing developers to easily sell their applications directly to end-users without the mediation of operators. The application gold rush has begun as the number of apps in Apple’s app store grew rapidly, which led to the launch of many other application stores.

In 2008, Google entered the arena with its open-source, Linux-based OS for mobile devices – Android. Unlike Apple, Google released the Android SDK to developers before the first device was shipped. Google also launched the Android Market for distributing Android apps. The first Android phone was T-Mobile G1, which was manufactured by HTC. Many other manufacturers jumped on the bandwagon and announced Android devices, including Samsung, Motorola, LG and Sony Ericsson. Although Nokia reached a market share record of 40% during 2008, its dominance in the smartphone market was in jeopardy. In an attempt to challenge Android, Nokia acquired 100% of Symbian shares and announced the open Symbian Foundation.

In 2009 Palm made a comeback with the Pre, running the new Linux-based OS, webOS (not be mistaken with the old Palm OS). Nokia probably realized that Symbian is not attractive enough, and released the N900, running the Linux-based Maemo OS. Samsung joined the Linux camp by releasing two Linux Mobile (LiMo) phones for Vodafone. Samsung that supported numerous smartphone platforms eventually decided that it needs its own proprietary platform and announced bada, yet another open mobile platform…

As the decade ends, we are witnessing an increasing number of smartphones running on many different platforms. Time will tell which of these platforms will prevail.

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Nokia Reveals its Plans for 2010

December 3, 2009

Nokia plans to reduce the amount of S40 devices that it releases and increase the percentage of smartphones in its portfolio. Both platforms currently utilized by the Finnish company (Symbian and Maemo) are planned to increase their share. Nokia plans major renewal of the aging Symbian UI and the launch of the first Maemo 6 device in the second half of 2010.

Nokia expects the amount of mobile phones sold in 2010 to be 10% higher, compared to 2009. The company expects to maintain its market share of 38% throughout the next year but admits that the average selling price of its devices will decrease.

Qualcomm and Fujitsu Join the Symbian Foundation Board

October 30, 2009

The Symbian Foundation announced that Qualcomm and Fujitsu joined its board of directors.

Qualcomm joined the Symbian Foundation through its wholly owned subsidiary Qualcomm Innovation Center (QuIC), which will have the role of “optimizing open source software for use with Qualcomm technology.”

Fujitsu, which sold more than 40 million Symbian-based phones in Japan “will work with foundation members to contribute to the development of the Symbian platform and is committed to Symbian’s continued commercial success.”

Qualcomm and Fujitsu will collaborate with the other Symbian Foundation board members, like Nokia, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, Vodafone, AT&T, NTT DoCoMo, Texas Instruments and ST Microelectronics NV.

Report: Symbian to Maintain OS Dominance

October 1, 2009

A new report from Juniper Research predicts that shipments of open source Symbian handsets will more than double over the next five years. However, the platform faces strong competition in a smartphone marketplace which is increasingly targeting consumers and “prosumers” as well as corporate customers, with the result that its overall market share will remain virtually unchanged over that period.

The Open Source OS report found that Symbian handset shipments were likely to reach 180 million by 2014, up from 87 million: this, allied to a steady increase in Android and LiMo shipments, will push the total open source handset market beyond 220 million by that time.

The Juniper Research report observed that while the developments by the LiMo Foundation, OHA (Android) and the Symbian foundation may suggest that the entire market is migrating towards open-source OS, Apple’s hugely popular iPhone product is in fact based on a proprietary operating system. RIM (Research in Motion) Microsoft and Palm also utilize proprietary operating systems in their respective smartphone products. However, with over 60% of the smartphone market now using an open-source OS, there has still been a significant a shift in position from proprietary to open-source.

The report found that the move to open source OS has encouraged developers to design new and attractive applications, providing a massive opportunity for innovation in the mobile telecoms industry. However, with a sharp growth in handset shipments over the next five years together with somewhat more modest increases of handsets shipped with Windows Mobile and Blackberry platforms, the race is on for a growing share of the future smartphones OS market.

Symbian Exec Says They Can Keep 50% of Smartphone Market

September 21, 2009

The world’s most popular smartphone operating system, Symbian, aims to retain its lead in the increasingly crowded market by focusing on easing the use of its the software for developers and users. The company, which was acquired by Nokia last year and then instructed to turn itself into an open foundation, has been steadily losing market share to new entrants like Apple and Google. However, David Wood, a technical exec with the company believes it can keep its 50% share of the smartphone market in the short term by “building a vibrant community, to make developers really satisfied.”

The London-headquartered foundation aims to have one billion devices running its operating system in 3-4 years time. It said in February Symbian was in more than 250 million phones. Wood maintains that 150 firms have already joined the Symbian Foundation, with another 50 expected to sign up shortly. While many of these firms are small developers, ZTE is already a member and Huawei is set to join within months – which could be vital given that both firms are known for their aggressive pricing to win market share, and have the ability to take the Symbian OS into the mass market.

With the focus in the maturing cellphone market shifting from hardware to software, the competition among operating systems has heated up, and Wood admits that the OS market is crowded, “probably too crowded. Everybody sees the potential of this space.”

Source: Reuters

Will Legacy Smartphone Platforms Keep-up with iPhone and Android?

August 26, 2009

BlackBerry OS, Windows Mobile and Symbian/S60 were designed years ago – the traditional strengths of these software platforms are rapidly becoming liabilities in the fast-paced smartphone market. Guest blogger Michael Vakulenko answers a critical question: are user interface face-lifts, application stores or even going open source enough for the legacy smartphone platforms to stand-up to the challenges posed by iPhone and Android?

A blog post by Michael Vakulenko

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Gartner: Smartphone Sales Grew 27% in Q2 2009

August 12, 2009

Worldwide mobile phone sales totalled 286.1 million units in the Q2 2009, a 6.1 % decrease from the second quarter of 2008, according to Gartner. Smartphone sales surpassed 40 million units, a 27% increase from the same period last year, representing the fastest-growing segment of the mobile-devices market.

Worldwide Mobile Terminal Sales to End Users in 2Q09 (Thousands of Units)

Company

2Q09

Sales

2Q09 Market

Share (%)

2Q08

Sales

2Q08 Market

Share (%)

Nokia

105,413.3 36.8 120,353.3 39.5

Samsung

55,430.2 19.3 46,376.0 15.2

LG

30,497.0 10.7 26,698.9 8.8

Motorola

15,947.8 5.6 30,371.8 10.0

Sony Ericsson

13,574.2 4.7 22,951.7 7.5

Others

65,260.2

23.0 57,970.6 19.0

Total

286,122.7

100

304,722.3

100

Note: This table includes iDEN shipments but excludes ODM-to-OEM shipments.
Source: Gartner (August 2009)

Nokia maintained its leadership position, but its portfolio remained heavily skewed toward low-end devices. Its flagship high-end N97 smartphone met little enthusiasm at its launch in the second quarter of 2009 and has sold just 500,000 units in the channel since it started to ship in June, compared to Apple’s iPhone 3G S, which sold 1 million units in its first weekend.

Samsung and LG both had a very strong second quarter of 2009 with sales of 55 million units and 30.5 million units, respectively. Samsung’s touchscreen devices, qwerty phones and smartphones drove sales in mature markets, and Gartner expects it will continue to gain market share in the second half of 2009 to close the gap with Nokia. Gartner expects LG to keep moving into lower-tier devices to drive growth in emerging markets and be well-positioned to take advantage of China’s 3G rollout as it can deliver good-value-for-money devices. Motorola’s sales of 15.9 million units were slightly better than expected, but its presence has rapidly concentrated on the Americas, and it has lost most of its share of the Western European market, where it sold fewer than 1 million units in the second quarter of 2009. Most operators and customers will be waiting for Motorola’s new Android-based products planned for the fourth quarter of 2009.

Sony Ericsson’s market share dropped 2.8% points year-on-year in the second quarter of 2009 but its volume dropped 41%. Although the market environment was challenging, Gartner attributes Sony Ericsson’s poor performance to its uncompetitive range of handsets.


Worldwide Smartphone Sales to End Users in 2Q09 (Thousands of Units)

Company

2Q09

Sales

2Q09 Market

Share (%)

2Q08

Sales

2Q08 Market

Share (%)

Nokia

18,441.0

45.0

15,297.9

47.4

Research In Motion

7,678.9

18.7

5,594.2

17.3

Apple

5,434.7

13.3

892.5

2.8

HTC

2,471.0

6.0

1,330.8

4.1

Fujitsu

1,249.0

3.0

1,071.5

3.3

Others

5,688.2

13.9

8,085.8

25.1

Total

40,962.8

100.0

32,272.7

100.0

Note: For HTC, Gartner counts only the company’s own-branded devices, including the G1.
Note: Totals may not add to 100.0 percent due to rounding.
Source: Gartner (August 2009)

In the smartphone OS market, Symbian held 51% share, down from 57% a year ago, while RIM and Apple grew their shares year-on-year. Android’s share was just under 2% of the market and more Android-based devices will come to market in the fourth quarter of 2009, intensifying competition in the smartphone OS market, particularly for Symbian and Windows Mobile. Microsoft’s share continued to drop year-on-year to account for 9% of the market in the second quarter of 2009.

Rumors: Nokia disappointed with Symbian, moving to Maemo

August 11, 2009

 The Financial Times Deutschland is reporting that Nokia is losing confidence in the Symbian OS facing the competition with Apple, Android and RIM. An undisclosed source in Nokia told FTD that the new Smartphones will now be shipped with the new Maemo OS that was recently developed by Nokia.

Only a year after the acquisition of Symbian by Nokia for 264 Million Euro, and a few months after the creation of the Symbian Foundation, Nokia feels that its time to move forward to better compete with the new open OS competitors. The Symbian code, which is based on the Psion OS from the 90’s, is said to have about 20 million lines of code, and is almost as complex as Windows XP. The Maemo OS was developed for the Nokia Internet tablets, and is based mainly on open source code, coming from the Debian GNU/Linux. It is slimmer, faster and more modern than the Symbian platform. A first Maemo-based smartphone is expected to be released within a few weeks.

According to Gartner, Symbian’s market share has fallen from 56.9% in Q1 of 2008 to 49.3% percent in Q1 this year, while RIM increased their market share of the BlackBerry  platform from 13.3% to 19.9% percent, and Apple’s iPhone OS market share grow from 5.3% to 10.8%. The young Android platform market share was still only 1.6% in Q1, but is growing fast.

Will this move erase Symbian from the Mobile OS landscape? The Symbian Foundation team in London claims not to be worried. In any case, they say, most of the Nokia smartphones are and will be for the next few years, based on Symbian. They also indicate the cooperation with Sony Ericsson, that should have a large portion of their smartphones on Symbian as well.

Will this move help to keep Nokia in a leading position? Here the answer is more complex. I believe that this move alone will not make the change. Nokia will need to constantly adapt to the fast changing market, and to offer a wide array of applications and a large and active developers community.

 

Source (in German):  http://www.ftd.de/technik/it_telekommunikation/:Strategiewende-Nokia-verliert-Vertrauen-zu-Symbian/551805.html

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Symbian^4 to Break Compatibility with S60 Apps

August 5, 2009

TamsS60 – the S60 blog recently had a chat with David Wood, the “Catalyst and Futurist” of the Symbian Foundation, and he’s managed to set the record straight about how S60 as we know it will be phased out over the next few years to make way for a new development stack. From Symbian^4, Qt will become the preferred programming environment for many parts of S60 app development. Qt is widely regarded as a productive, elegant set of class libraries, with a great deal of active community support. The current “S60 Avkon” APIs for the UIs of applications will be phased out. This means that most current S60 applications will break except for low-level things that aren’t using Avkon UI elements. That’s a big deal and a bit of an issue considering the huge installed based of S60 users and apps.

Help us improve symbian ui

July 27, 2009

ui-blog-headerA new blog launched by Scott Weiss, Symbian UI Technology Manager – asks users to submit their ideas on how to improve the Symbian user interface.

The site says: “This site is a user interface (UI) brainstorm, where visual sketches of your suggestions will be shared. Text can be included in the sketches, but the blog is meant to be nearly all visual. It was inspired by the Gimp UI Brainstorm. As a proper brainstorm, no comments or trackbacks are supported on this blog. The images in this blog are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License. Email your suggestions (link just above) and once I get a chance to look them over, I’ll post them here. Thanks, Scott Weiss, Symbian UI Technology Manager”

So, have any ideas?