Upstarts challenge reign of Google's Android
A small band
of upstarts is chipping away at Google's mighty Android, hoping one day to
overthrow the system that runs eight in 10 smartphones sold worldwide.
Google's Android logo is displayed during a press event at Google headquarters. (AFP/Getty Images/Justin Sullivan)
Mozilla's Firefox OS and the Samsung-promoted Tizen
staked a small claim to the market at the industry's largest fair, the
February 24-27 Mobile World Congress in
If there is a threat to Android's dominance, however,
it could emerge from a slowdown in saturated smartphone markets and the birth
of a new interest in smart watches, bracelets and glasses, analysts say.
Android powered 78.4 per cent of all smartphones sold
in 2013, according to industry analyst Gartner Inc. Apple's iOS mopped up
most of the rest, taking 15.6 per cent.
"There is little doubt that 2013 was the year of
Android," said a report by industry research house Strategy Analytics.
"However, Android's annual growth rate slowed to
62 per cent in 2013, its lowest level in the platform's history," it
added.
"We expect Android's growth to slow further in
2014 due to market saturation, and rivals like Microsoft or Firefox will be
ready to pounce on any signs of a major slowdown for Android this year."
California-based Mozilla would not disclose how many
Firefox OS smartphones have been sold since the first such handset was
launched last July.
In
Mozilla also unveiled new Firefox OS devices, two
smartphones made by
"It is not enough to have two operating systems in
the telecoms world," Firefox chief operating officer Jay Sullivan told a
news conference.
Despite the buzz around Firefox, Greenwich Consulting
senior partner Magnus Rehle said it had not seen "great success".
Samsung, the world's biggest smartphone manufacturer
and leader of a consortium developing the rival Tizen operating system, could
be a more important rival to Android.
"They have the muscle to do it. But what added
value does it give to the consumer?" asked Rehle. "Nothing, I would
say."
Samsung seems to be drawing the line at allowing
Android to run other smart devices such as its newly unveiled smart watches.
On Sunday, it revealed a new smart watch, the Samsung
Gear 2, which runs on Tizen, and boasts a camera, sports tracking software
and even a heart rate monitor.
But even in smart watches, Android remains the king,
powering 61 per cent of the roughly two million sold in 2013, according to
Strategy Analytics.
Most of that growth, ironically, was due to the sales
of Samsung's first smart watch, the Samsung Gear, which relied on Android.
Android has several challengers in the smart watch industry
including Firefox and Pepple Technology's Pebble OS, which lets its own
watches communicate with Apple's iOS and Android, said Woody Oh, senior
analyst at Strategy Analytics.
"But none of them are a major threat at this stage
because of their relatively limited ecosystems and modest retail
presence," Oh said.
The main challenge to Android's dominance in smart
watches could come from Apple iOS, Microsoft, and perhaps Tizen or the
Chinese state-sponsored
"These four brands have the potential scale or
marketing power to offer a credible alternative to Google's popular
platform."
AFP
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Thứ Ba, 25 tháng 2, 2014
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