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Google's Android mobile operating system surged past Apple's iPhone and Canada's Blackberry in the third quarter to become the second biggest smartphone platform after Nokia's Symbian, research firm Gartner said on Nevember 10.
Gartner said Finland's Nokia sold 29.5 million smartphones during the third quarter of the year for a 36.6 percent share of the world-wide market, down from 44.6 percent a year ago.
Sales of Android-powered smartphones soared to 20.5 million units, giving the Android platform a 25.5 percent market share, up from just 3.5 percent a year ago, Gartner said.
Apple's iPhone was next on sales of 13.5 million units for a 16.7 percent market share, down from 17.1 percent a year ago. Canada's Research In Motion, maker of the Blackberry, was in fourth position with sales of 11.9 million units. Its market share dropped to 14.8 percent from 20.7 percent a year ago.
Microsoft's Windows Mobile saw sales of 2.2 million units giving it a 2.8 percent market share, down from 7.9 percent a year ago, Gartner said.
"Smartphone (operating system) providers have entered a period of accelerated platform evolution, stimulated by more regular product releases, new platform entrants and new device types," said Roberta Cozza, principal research analyst at Gartner.
Gartner said world-wide mobile phone sales totalled 417 million units in the third quarter, up 35 percent from a year ago.
Smartphone sales grew 96 percent to 81 million units and accounted for 19.3 percent of overall mobile phone sales in the quarter.
Nokia remained the world's top handset manufacturer with sales of 117.5 million units in the third quarter but saw its world-wide market share slip to 28.2 percent from 36.7 percent a year ago.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2010

Data usage boom causing network congestion: survey
HELSINKI: Telecoms equipment makers will be the big beneficiaries as mobile service operators are forced to make major investments to ease network congestion caused by a boom in demand for data services, a survey showed on November 9. Kit makers such as Nokia Siemens, Ericsson and Alcatel-Lucent would get a timely boost after taking a hit in recent years from aggressive pricing by Asian rivals.
Most telecoms operators around the world are struggling with network capacity as mobile Internet services take off. Fearful of losing customers, only a few have publicly admitted to the problem of keeping pace with data traffic, but 63 percent are experiencing difficulties, a global survey of 30 operators by telecoms software firm Amdocs showed.
-- Network congestion hits 63pc of operators
-- 20pc see severe overload at peak times
-- Laptops main culprits in Asia, smartphones in N. America
-- Most telcos see expanding capacity as the main solution
One in five operators said they experienced severe overload during peak times, the survey also revealed. "This is the first evidence we have seen that data capacity crunch is very much a global thing. In Asia it's more to do with laptops, while in North America it's about smartphones," said David Chambers, a senior official at Amdocs.
"Operators are planning to spend significant amounts of money to expand networks."
Copyright Reuters, 2010

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