For all the hype of the iPhone (not to mention its antenna-challenged iPhone 4 model), it is far from first in the mobile phone market. Apple sold 8.4 million iPhones during its fiscal third quarter of the year, which works out to 93,333 iPhones sold each day during the quarter.
In contrast, Google CEO Eric Schmidt recently announced that the company is activating 200,000 Android handsets per day. That's quite a bit more than Apple is selling.
Not to be outdone, the Symbian Foundation announced it shipped more than 27 million devices during the last quarter. This amounts to nearly 300,000 Symbian devices sold per day, 207 per minute or over three per second. Symbian includes Nokia's S60 platform, NTT DoCoMo's FOMA handsets, and other devices from Sony Ericsson and Samsung - e.g. the "not as smart" phones.
As much as we hear that the iPhone and Andoids are what everyone's buying these days, for the time being at least, they aren't the majority of the market.
Where will Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 fit in here? According to http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/072610-wireless-burning-question-1.html, Windows Phone 7 is shaping up as the most innovative mobile UI since ... the iPhone introduction three years ago. Microsoft says the device, differing from earlier Windows Mobile devices, will be "a phone, not a PC" (or a PDA trying to be a phone).
Windows Phone 7 will have high integration with other Microsoft platforms such as Office, SharePoint, Exchange, and Azure (not to leave out security and management), which may give it strong points for the corporate environment. It's also supposed to be "cool" - something Microsoft has had limited success with in the mobile phone market. The question will be how cool it is ultimately perceived to be, and where it will land in this competitive market.
Meanwhile, rumors continue that Apple is speeding up the schedule to deliver the iPhone 5, as a response to the problems with the iPhone 4.
This fall will be an interesting time to see what happens with Microsoft in the smart phone market, and perhaps their last chance to get it right.
Kerrie Meyler, MVP, MCSE, MCTS, MCT, is an independent consultant and trainer with over fifteen years of experience in IT. While at Microsoft in Field Technical Sales for four years she focused on infrastructure and mangement, presenting at numerous product launches. Kerrie has presented Operations Manager 2007 at TechEd 2007, MMS 2009, MMS 2011, and internal Microsoft conferences, receiving company recognition and awards including a SPAR MGS award. Kerrie worked with Microsoft Learning to develop functional specifications for the original Operations Manager Microsoft courseware, 2550: Implementing Microsoft Operations Manager 2000 and did the beta teach for that course.She also participated in development for several System Center certification exams.
Kerrie is the lead author of Microsoft Operations Manager 2005 Unleashed, System Center Operations Manager 2007 Unleashed, System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM) 2007 Unleashed, System Center Operations Manager 2007 R2 Unleashed, System Center Opalis Integration Server 6.3 Unleashed and System Center Service Manager 2010 Unleashed.
Check out an excerpt from System Center Operations Manager 2007 Unleashed, Chapter 3: Looking Inside OpsMgr.
You can also check out an excerpt from System Center Configuration (SCCM) Manager 2007 Unleashed, Chapter 3: Looking Inside ConfigMgr.
Read a sample chapter of System Center Operations Manager 2007 R2 Unleashed at Chapter 1: Introduction and What's New.
You can also read a sample chapter of System Center Opalis Integration Server 6.3 Unleashed at Chapter 1: Introducing Opalis Integration Server 6.3 and System Center Service Manager 2010 Unleashed at Chapter 1:Service Management Basics.
System Center Service Manager 2010 Unleashed was selected as the September, 2011 book giveaway for Microsoft Subnet.