New Linux Mobile Stats Showcase Smartphone Frustrations
Written by Evan SchumanJuly 14th, 2010
The mobile space is nothing if not nuanced. That point was driven home Wednesday (July 14) when ABI Research released its latest batch of mobile marketshare figures.
Those stats showed that Linux-based mobile devices "will outstrip growth of the entire mobile device market" by 2015, with Linux controlling 62 percent of the mobile OS space. For a retailer looking to select which mobile platforms to prioritize, that's important. Ahhh, but then the footnotes start.
This Story Is Only Available For Premium Subscribers. Click Or Login In Below To Read The Rest Of This Story.
Already a Subscriber? Login Here
One Comment | Read New Linux Mobile Stats Showcase Smartphone Frustrations
Leave a Reply
Readers, specifically those who want to comment on a story:
Our Comment SPAM system is getting very aggressive these days and has been blocking legitimate comments. If you post a comment and don't see it appear within 2 hours or so, can you please send a heads-up to customer-service@storefrontbacktalk.com? Ideally, please include the time you posted the comment. That will allow us to try and hunt for it. Thanks! P.S. We're working on fixing the system, but we don't want to lose any valuable comments in the meantime.
Our Comment SPAM system is getting very aggressive these days and has been blocking legitimate comments. If you post a comment and don't see it appear within 2 hours or so, can you please send a heads-up to customer-service@storefrontbacktalk.com? Ideally, please include the time you posted the comment. That will allow us to try and hunt for it. Thanks! P.S. We're working on fixing the system, but we don't want to lose any valuable comments in the meantime.

-Christine

July 15th, 2010 at 8:31 am
I agree with your conclusion. The operating system is a non-issue. More important is the language the app is written in (Objective-C for iPhone, Java for BlackBerry and Android, etc…). Yet more important is the “ecosystem” and delivery mechanism. The BlackBerry platform is one of the only I know of that allows the developer to bypass an app store and deliver over-the-air. Personally I don’t understand why an enterprise would want to put their proprietary client on a mobile vendor’s app store. Fast forward 5 years (a long time in mobile years), and I would expect even these issues to be moot. HTML5 will most likely eclipse app stores with web delivered apps having much of the same capabilities as today’s mobile apps.