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Google's Schmidt: Android Is 'Winning' War for Dominance

Google
December 12, 2012 2:06PM

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The overwhelming numerical superiority of Android is not unlike Microsoft's operating system heyday with Windows. Last month, for instance, an IDC report was one of several studies to show Android's overwhelming market share dominance -- 75 percent. Google Chairman Eric Schmidt said Android was "winning that war pretty clearly now."

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Android Relevant Products/Services=Microsoft Relevant Products/Services's OS in the 1990s. That's the view of Google Chairman Eric Schmidt, who this week compared Android's growth and increasing dominance among mobile Relevant Products/Services platforms to Microsoft's position among desktop systems at the end of the last century. In both situations, interestingly enough, Apple was second.

Schmidt's comments were made in an interview with Bloomberg Businessweek on Tuesday. Schmidt noted that customers are activating more than 1.3 million Android devices each day. He described this situation as "a huge platform change," equivalent to Microsoft triumphing over Apple two decades ago.

'Winning that War'

Schmidt said Android was "winning that war pretty clearly now." He described the Android side as "we," which, in this historical instance, includes not only Google but its wide ecosystem of hardware partners, carriers, retailers and others, many of whom are customizing the open source Android for their purposes.

The overwhelming numerical superiority of Android is not unlike Microsoft's operating system heyday with Windows. Last month, for instance, an IDC report was one of several studies to show Android's overwhelming market share dominance -- 75 percent for Android, 15 percent for Apple, and only 2 percent for Windows Phone 7/Windows Mobile. What's even more impressive is Android's year-over-year growth: 91.5 percent.

Accompanying the IDC report, IDC Mobile Phones Research Manager Ramon Llamas said in a statement that, in every year since Android was launched in 2008, the platform has "effectively outpaced the market and taken market share from the competition." He added that the volumes of shipments have been driven by the "combination of smartphone vendors, mobile operators and end users."

'A Bigger Pie'

However, nothing lasts forever, especially not in technology. IDC has also predicted that, while Android currently occupies a period of dominance in smartphones that will last for at least five years, the Windows Phone platform will experience a 71 percent annual growth rate, reaching 11 percent market share by 2016 -- and possibly become a challenger.

In both Google's and Microsoft's cases, the dominant operating system in their respective time periods did not control the hardware, which has been a key driver of their successes. But Google, unlike Microsoft, has given away its OS. Schmidt said that the reasoning behind that strategy was to "make a bigger pie" for Google to sell ads and provide apps Relevant Products/Services and services -- and, recently, a few hardware products -- but the consequence is that the pie is neither "perfectly controlled" or managed.

On Wednesday, another Google executive demonstrated the company's confidence that its platform is in the driving seat. Clay Bavor, product management Relevant Products/Services director for Google Apps, said the company was not planning on developing any of its apps for Windows Phone or Windows 8 tablets or PCs.

Bavor told news media that Google is "very careful" about investing its resources on popular platforms, and, at the moment, users "are not on Windows Phone or Windows 8." If the user base increases, Bavor said, Google could change its position.

Based on your interest in this article, here's something that may be of interest to you also:

Recommended Reading: Search & Destroy: Why You Can't Trust Google Inc. Synopsis: This is the other side of the Google story. In Search & Destroy, Google expert Scott Cleland, shows that the world's most powerful company is not who it pretends to be. Google pretends to be a harmless lamb, but chose a full-size model of a Tyrannosaurus Rex as its mascot. Beware the T-Rex in sheep's clothing.

Tell Us What You Think
Comment:

Name:

rubin pham:

Posted: 2012-12-12 @ 2:41pm PT
android is the new windows. wintel will be dead.

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