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Nokia And Microsoft... But How About Android?

By Michael Hickins | Aug 17, 2009

Putting together the Microsoft-Nokia alliance announced last week with Gartner’s new figures on the smartphone market, and you would think the entire device world revolves around Nokia’s focus on keeping runner-up Research in Motion at bay.

And at first glance, you’d be right. The alliance does a number of things for both Nokia and Microsoft.

  • For Nokia, it makes Symbian-based smartphones a less-expensive alternative to RIM’s Blackberry Enterprise Server, because it won’t cost enterprises extra to manage Nokia devices using Exchange, and the alliance makes Microsoft Office into a native Nokia application;
  • The alliance could also help Nokia promote Web-based mobile applications through Microsoft’s on-demand SharePoint Server collaboration portal;
  • Microsoft can appeal to Nokia’s huge worldwide user and developer base without waiting for its new app store to gain traction, and may have found a way to rescue its presence in the mobile market when it inevitably sunsets the flagging Windows Mobile franchise.

When I say flagging franchise, by the way, Gartner’s recent report stated that

Microsoft’s share continued to drop year-on-year to account for 9 per cent of the market in the second quarter of 2009. [emphasis mine]

Symbian continues to hold the lion’s share with 51 percent, RIM is at 19 percent, and Apple at 9 percent. As Fortune’s Philip Elmer-DeWitt summarized the report,

Sales of Nokia’s Symbian smartphones are drifting. Apple’s iPhone is gaining on RIM’s BlackBerry. Microsoft’s Windows Mobile is still sinking. And the launch of the Palm Pre barely made a ripple in the gobal smartphone market.

So why am I talking about Android, which barely tips the scale at 2 percent of the smartphone OS market? Because while everyone else is foundering, Android is taking off. One of the big outliers in the Gartner report is HTC, which boosted handset sales by 46 percent. Only Apple did better. In case you hadn’t guessed, HTC’s big release this year was the G1, the first Android-powered handset to hit the market.

More, much more is on the way. According to Phil Goldstein, HTC is in the process of launching two new Android-based handsets, the Hero and Magic.

HTC has shipped more than 1 million units of the Magic, its second phone powered by Google’s Android platform, according to a DigiTimes report citing HTC CEO Peter Chou. The phone launched in Europe this spring and made its debut Aug. 5 in the U.S. as  T-Mobile USA’s myTouch 3G.

Google plans to adapt existing applications, including e-mail and tools for creating documents and calendars, to Android-based smartphones, [Google executive Andy] Rubin says. Google’s offering may be cheaper than RIM’s, [Frost & Sullivan consultant Ronald] Gruia says. “They’ll have a very compelling value proposition, for sure,” he says.
There are currently less than a handful of commercially-available Android handsets, but according to Rubin, there will be eighteen on the market by the end of the year. Which means that by this time next year, no one will be thinking about this alliance of erstwhile market leaders, but may be looking instead at the raging front between fast-growing Apple and faster-growing Google.

Michael Hickins is a professional writer and journalist with a passion for ferreting out the intersections between technology and culture.

BNET User Analysis

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    conlad

    08/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Nokia And Microsoft... But How About Android?

    I wonder how important will be the fact that Office goes to Nokia's phones. After all RIM and now Apple, and their users, have spent a good while figuring out how to work around it all and so far so good. Also, everything is moving to the cloud and open-source, so what good will be an Office-equipped Nokia if they cannot connect with the rest of the apps out there?

    With this vision in mind, Google and Android do have a good opportunity in front of them. If they can leverage into Android all the apps Google has in the Cloud and make the experience productive AND fun (for example, let your Android smartphone the central hub of your Wave account, and from there gain access to everything else, including corporate mail and others), as well as keeping things Open and ready for iPhone's app developers to quickly make versions for their system (and gain some money doing so), then I can see Android surpassing RIM, whose strategy is not so clear, and dueling it out with the iPhone.

    Of course, that won't be easy, but we will see.

  •  
    2

    Michael Hickins

    08/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Nokia And Microsoft... But How About Android?

    I like your idea of making the smartphone the hub of your Wave account, but that would imply that enterprises adopt Wave as a collaboration tool. Google will have to address privacy and security issues before that happens, though.

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