Android

Apple still dominating the app sector in 2013

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ABI Research  estimates that the global app economy will reach $25 billion this year.  Around 35% ($8.8M) will be tablet apps and 65% ($16.4 M) will be smartphones apps.  Apple will continue its domination of  the app sector with a market share around 65%. ABI forecasts that  by 2018, tablet apps should surpass smartphone apps in revenue. In five years, total global app revenue could reach $92 billion.  ABI’s analyst  believes that  Apple’s market share will stay very strong for many years to come: “By 2018 in terms of tablets it will still be 57 percent, and in terms of tablets plus smartphones, it will still be above 50 percent … around 52 percent.”

Louis Rhéaume

Infocom Analysis

louis@infocomintelligence.com

Twitter: @InfocomAnalysis

 

The smartphone is killing traditional cellphones

iphone5Comp

Traditional computer sales are shrinking.  Traditional books, traditional music and DVD sales are also decreasing while the applications market soars. Microsoft, the father of the software industry, and Nokia, once the world’s largest manufacturer of mobile, are desperately trying to catch-up with competitors. When it seemed that Apple’s reign would last few decades, thanks to its iconic iPhone and iPad, Samsung appeared, and defeated Apple as the first smartphone manufacturer in the World.

Smartphones have become the “center of personal digital life”. 80% of users sleep with their smartphones and 40% are even using it in the bathroom (Intel study, April 2012).

The smartphone has become the first screen surpassing the television, even in moments of prime time.  For Javier Nadal, Executive Vice President of Fundación Telefónica, “users are using different devices based on time of day, for example, mobile devices are more often used to connect to the Internet at awakening, breakfast and lunch, while the dominance of the tablet PC appears stronger in the remaining hours “.

In an increasingly digitized world, personal communication goes increasingly virtual: the social network users communicate with each other in an average of 23 individuals a day, while in person reaches only 16 individuals.

In 2012, for the first time ever, a decrease in the sales of mobile phones occurred. It traded 1.7% lower (1.750 million units). That negative milestone was due to the decline of basic phones, which are only used for little more than talking and texting.

The tablets splendidly started as younger brother of smartphones, while it exceeds in inches, is changing the habits of users and, more importantly, consumers. Electronic commerce is rapidly moving from e-commerce to m-commerce. In the fourth quarter, transactions both on smartphones and tablets from the U.S., accounted for 11% of total e-commerce spending.

For if 2012 was the year of smartphones, most experts predict that 2013 will be the year of tablets.  Digitimes Research estimates that, for the first time, the sale of tablets, adding the brand and the private label (made to third parties, for example, for operators) – overtake the laptop. The market will grow by 38.3% to total sales of 210 million units. That transition to finer screen has already occurred. Two out of six computers sold in the last quarter of 2012 were tablets, according to Canalys.

By contrast, in 2012 352 million PCs were sold, down 3.2%.  It was the first annual drop since 2001, according to IDC. Even the appearance of Windows 8, the new operating system from Microsoft, has not been able to stop the decline.

Parallel to this change,  was a complete reversal of the protagonists. There are new players, but the leadership does not last decades. Apple, which looked like it had come to stay, has lost its dominance. As a manufacturer, Samsung has demonstrated its Galaxy line that there is life beyond the iPhone. The South Korean firm dominated the world market not only for phones, but smartphones, with more than 200 million units, compared to 120 million for iPhones.

Android is now installed on 68.8% of smartphones distributed in 2012, gaining nearly 20 points(percent) in a single year, and leaving far behind iOS, Apple’s own system, which has a share of 18.8%.

“Android is now a very strong demand. It represents around 90% of the market by value and 70% by volume, and so we work with it “, says the director of the division of LG Mobile Spain.

Although AppStore is still the leader in number of applications and revenue, Google Play, store finder, is gaining ground. It has almost the same catalog (700,000 versus 800,000 applications). In the fourth quarter, Android doubled their applications growth, while those of AppStore grew by 20%.

Operators, which until now caught most of the revenue generated by mobile telephony, are reducing their share every year, and in mature markets such as Europe, are also billing. According to Wireless Intelligence, Worldwide sales of mobile operators increased by 5.2% in 2012, to $ 1.16 trillion, but only thanks to the boost from emerging markets, which now account for four out of five new mobile connections global scale.

It is also changing the structure of earnings. The consultancy Ovum estimates that voice revenues, which now represent 64% of the total, will only be 52% in 2017. The growth of mobile broadband will mean rising incomes, at an annual rate of 8.2% expected by 2017.

Outside of business applications, with users willing to spend their savings on the latest smartphone while pressing for more affordable flat rate, operators still have not given the key to retain their share of the pie. The Over The Top (OTT) services such as messaging and free calls as WhastApp, Skype or Line will have a negative impact on operating income of 370 billion dollars by 2020.

At the same time, operators must make a huge investment effort to lay new fiber optic lines and mobile fourth generation (LTE), necessary to absorb the exponential traffic growth as causing intruders Google or Apple.  In 2011, revenues from Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Apple and Facebook reached 200 000 million, compared with 350 000 million top five global operators (Vodafone, AT & T, China Mobile, Telefonica and Verizon).

Only the application market in the world accounted for more than 15,000 million dollars in 2012 and is estimated to reach more than 24,000 million this year. “Revenues are concentrated mostly in the platform / store in the operator, which only benefits the traffic generated by the application, depending on the customer’s rate plan, but also indirectly through customer loyalty in the case of apps high demand, “says Pedro Jurado, director of Accenture Technology.

Jose Arias, vice president of the consulting firm Booz & Company in Spain, warning that “the current infrastructures are reaching a saturation point, forcing aggressive investments in both capacity increases and technological improvements. Given the rate of annual growth of mobile data traffic, close to 80%, and 28% in fixed networks, it is expected that the volume of data traffic in the world will double every two and a half years. ”

To assume increasing traffic and new services, operators face the challenge of launching the fourth generation of mobile known as Long Term Evolution (LTE), which allows download speeds of more than 100 megabytes per second. It requires huge investments monetize OTT tools that benefit from this infrastructure without paying a penny. So far, there are 152 commercial LTE networks across 65 countries, and by the end of 2013 there will be 114 million subscribers, which will double in 2014, according to a Yankee Group report.

“Operators have to invest not only in deploying LTE networks at a pace faster and faster (in a decidedly adverse economic climate), but also in finding innovative ways to monetize these new networks, while struggling with the increasingly intense competition from OTT, who wants to steal their bread and butter that are voice revenues and messages, “said Declan Lonergan, Yankee Group.

That OTT threat is very real. Voice revenues of mobile operators, which were 769,000 million in 2011, will be reduced by 9% in 2016 despite the increase in subscribers. However, Juniper Research believes that the costly investment required by LTE may end up with a reward.  In 2017, it will account for 31% of global revenues, amounting to 250,000 million euros (in 2012 it involved only around 55,000 million).  For now, the head of the deployment is among U.S. operators (AT & T, Verizon and Sprint), which will provide almost complete coverage in 2014.

Source: El Pais

 

Louis Rhéaume

Infocom Analysis

louis@infocomintelligence.com

Twitter: @InfocomAnalysis

Apple has 2X more cumulative download app than Android

Juniper Research reports that Apple has now 2X more cumulative download app than Android: 40M vs 20M.  Both mobile operating system largely dominate tha app market with a combined 75% market share.  Apple got a huge 20M download app only in 2012. iOS developers have received over $7 billion from iOS apps, while Apple collected 30%, just over $3 billion from the arrangement, including around $1.5 billion for 2012.

Nokia Store, Blackberry App World and GetJar are in the top 5 app stores of 2012, with around nine billion downloads between them.  It becomes difficult for Microsoft and Amazon to attract mobile developers.  Both Apple and Google can deliver immense scale, with audiences in the hundreds of millions.

While Apple and Android have similar download statistics for 2o12, Apple monetizes around 10% of its app, while it is only 3% of Google apps.  iOS apps also see far higher revenues from freemium.

Louis Rhéaume

Infocom Analysis

louis@infocomintelligence.com

Twitter: @InfocomAnalysis

“4 Mobile Advertising Stocks That Can Benefit From A $12 Billion U.S. Market By 2016″ is available on Seeking Alpha

http://seekingalpha.com/article/888051-4-mobile-advertising-stocks-that-can-benefit-from-a-12-billion-u-s-market-by-2016

about: GOOG, includes: AAPLFBMMP

Louis Rhéaume

Infocom Analysis

louis@infocomintelligence.com

Twitter: @InfocomAnalysis

Innovation of the month: App Mobli, an alternative to Instagram

What is Mobli?  Here is an answer from their web site.

Mobli is a real-time visual media platform made up of subject-based channels such as people, places and topics. Mobli enables users to see the world through other people’s eyes. There’s no doubt that social media has taken the world by storm. However, let’s face it, social media was born in a pre-smart phone era. Mobli has created a website integrated to iPhones, Android & Blackberry apps that unlock the power of social media!

Mobli unlocks the hidden potential of social media by leveraging the power of smartphones, enabling people to quickly and easily share & experience events via high-quality videos and photos uploaded on-location and in real-time.  With the integration of channels and geo-location, Mobli enables people to share their special occasions, experiences or interests, with communities of individuals who will appreciate them.

For example, concert-goers, celebrity fans, wedding attendees, car enthusiasts and families can all share pictures and videos of an occasion, experience or interest with like-minded communities.

Thus, Mobli is an alternative to Instagram, with its ability to share pictures but also videos with friends and strangers. The service of course has filters and powerful editing tools, but what’s cool about Mobli is that users can share their pictures out to various channels that are open to the world. So even if you don’t have any friends on the service – a big barrier for any social service — you can still get good feedback from people interested in the same topics. You can create any kind of channel from the desktop version, a feature that is coming soon to mobile. Or you can find relevant channels or see what’s being shared around you. The service, which has 2.5 million users, has raised more than $4 million from some well known investors including Leonardo DiCaprio.

Mobli is available on iPhone, Blackberry and Android.

Louis Rhéaume

Infocom Intelligence

louis@infocomintelligence.com

Twitter: @InfocomAnalysis

Android has a collective evolution

[Published originally on March 5, 2012]

According to Andy Rubin of Google, there are 850,000 activations of Android devices, whether mobile or tablets a day. Rubin explains the motivations behind the acquisition of Motorola: “The advantage of having a firm that makes it able to dial to where we think the future will, but it won’t make anything exclusive that it may damage the rest… We believe in an open ecosystem.”

As it happens, Motorola released the Android 3.0 Xoom tablet. Samsung offers version 4.0, which unifies tablets and phones. “Without balance you can not make an ecosystem. ” Within this logic fits the fact that many manufacturers such as Motorola’s own Motoblur, Samsung or HTC Sense Hub, provide their own equipment and adaptable interface. “I know it’s controversial, some may prefer the pure system, as it comes, it also helps handled who are not familiar or want to customize. Anything to give consumers more choices seems right. ”

Rubin has revealed that in 2011 12 million tablets with Google software were sold, excluding the Amazon Kindle Fire. They just doubled those sold in 2010.

First came Google Music, Google Books and later, YouTube was acquired… Just after they released Android. Now they need to combine both worlds … “We will add more content, but for now we can not advertise. We have to improve to do business. ”

Android still has some issues to solve: such as hiw you can’t have good Facebook application in tablets? All board members have agreed that what is seen in the 10 inch version does not seem very consistent with the social network. “We will try to mark a path as the application of Gmail or YouTube, which detects the device and adapts, but it is a question for us, but for Facebook it does offer a version for iPhone and one for iPad” . A few hours later the head of Facebook’s Technology has announced its commitment to a web-based, open mobile HTML5.

Rubin says high-end phones today will become the minimum within a window of 18 months. “The important thing is to be brave enough to set trends.” When he arrived at Google, the firms invested in Android because, he says, Google knew that their business model, with free services and advertising revenue, was the only one who could succeed with their vision completely. It is unfair to think that all innovation comes from a company. The evolution is collective. ”

Neither ruled out at some point a launch of a Google e-reader, but it does not seem too logical: “There is already an application in our Kindle Store.”

The future, according to Rubin, is the era postPC. Once you have set in tablets and phones the next frontier is in the home, when you come home and leave the keys, mobile and work. “I feel that if we put Android at home, this will not work. We must be imaginative to join more traveling companions. If not, others will come up with another ecosystem. It is an industry that we want to lead by giving intelligence to home,” he argues. It fits with the line of home automation smart labels, just a day before Sony had introduced its new handsets.

Source: El Pais

Louis Rhéaume
Infocom Intelligence
louis@infocomintelligence.com
Twitter: @InfocomAnalysis

New article on Seeking Alpha: The battle of smartphones manufacturers

[Published originally on WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2011]

My new article “The battle of smartphones manufacturers” is now available on Seeking Alpha.

http://seekingalpha.com/article/309935-the-battle-of-smart-phones-manufacturers

Louis Rhéaume
Infocom Intelligence
louis@infocomintelligence.com
Twitter: @InfocomAnalysis

Apple has 90% of the mobile revenues in applications

[Published originally on November 22, 2011]

Google’s mobile operating system, Android, has become the top platform in some countries, even eclipsing Apple’s iOS. And this makes sense—after all, there are many, many more Android devices to choose from, including more budget options. But when it comes down to developers’ earnings, there’s no competition.

However, new data released by Piper Jaffray revealed that the Android platform has generated just 7% of the revenue that Apple’s iOS has—a meagre $330 million compared to a staggering $4.9 billion. While an impressive 14% of iOS apps downloaded are paid, only 1% of downloaded Android apps are. I guess that’s what happens when a platform’s core demographic are those with tighter budgets. Apple boasts as much as 90% of the mobile market share in terms of app revenue.

Source: http://www.techvibes.com/blog/apple-owns-90-of-mobile-revenue-marketshare-ios-developers-make-14x-as-much-as-android-developers-2011-11-21

Louis Rhéaume
Infocom Intelligence
louis@infocomintelligence.com
Twitter: @InfocomAnalysis

The most popular music apps in the USA

[Published originally on SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2011]

here are the most popular music apps for Android and iPhone.

Source: http://gigaom.com/2011/11/11/tunein-radio-rises-to-the-top-among-streaming-music-apps/

Louis Rhéaume
Infocom Intelligence
louis@infocomintelligence.com
Twitter:@InfocomAnalysis

The fastest growing communications innovations: What is next?

[Published originally on MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 2011]

The technology adoption of some new communications innovations have increased exponentially in recent years.  The following graph shows that while it took around 75 years to the fixed line to reach 50 million customers, it took only 12 years to the mobile phone, 5 years to the iPod,  4 years to the e-mail and only 3 years to the Skype’s VoIP software.  It can be explained by the fact that several communications networks are already in place and new innovations can leverage existing infrastructure.  Another reason is the fact that communications consumers are more “technology educated” than before.  The fastest growing tech firm at the convergence of social networks, and mobile commerce is Groupon, which has reached 2 billion in revenue in two years of existence and the key mark of 50 million subscribers.

Source: debitel

A recent report by In-Stat indicates that smartphones are becoming the “standard” in mobile devices. Particularly the demand for advanced mobile handsets that contain significant processing power, robust memory, large screens and open operating systems will drive the sales of mobile manufacturers.
Their forecast is that unit shipments of smartphones will be nearly 850 million by 2015. Among the critical factors for the smartphone success, there are powerful browsers, a wide variety of apps, easy to navigate user interface, and a good keyboard or touchscreen. Furthermore, other intangible attributes, such as being “fashion object” and that “your friends or relatives have one” are also important.
In-Stat also predicts that the majority of U.S. handset shipments will be smartphones by 2012 while Android would maintain its momentum and will continue to be the leading OS.  In-Stat suggests that by 2015, over two-thirds of smartphones will still be WCDMA-based, with LTE smartphones representing only a small minority of annual handset shipments, even in four years.
What other communications devices will reach the fastest 50 million users?
Tablets represent a challenger with the penetration in the business sector. According to Gartner, nearly 20 million tablets have been sold in 2010, and around 54.8 million will be in 2011 and it should reach 208 million in 2014. In addition to Apple iPads, tablets include those based on Android, RIM, WebOS and other such operating systems. It appears that Apple iPads and other tablets are cannibalizing e-readers, gaming devices, and mini-notebooks.
 “Mini notebooks will suffer from the strongest cannibalization threat as media tablet average selling prices drop below $300 over the next 2 years,” says Carolina Milanesi, research vice president at Gartner. Gartner suggests that the North American market will account for 61% of the total market this year but that the percentage will fall to 43% in 2014 as tablets become more widely available across the world. More than half of tablets sold in 2010 supported WiFi.
It appears that Android tablets are gaining interesting market shares over iPad in the last quarter.  They gained 22% of the Q4-2010 market.  The iPad had 95% and decreased to 75%.   Galaxy, Samsung’s tablet with Android is the main contender for the iPad. Strategy Analytics forecast that Apple’s iPad will decrease below 50% market share in the next 2 years.
Growth opportunities
·         Firms which should heavily benefits from the growth of tablets are:
o   online publishers (the ones who will bet on e-Books growth and sell directly to the public: i.e. Amazon)
o   devices manufacturers (Apple, Samsung, RIM)
o   technology suppliers (Tech SMEs, Publishing Technology plc)
Google just bought eBook Technologies 3 weeks ago.  It provides an end-to-end electronic book platform offering a full range of eBook products and services. It includes electronic reading devices, an online bookstore where readers can buy eBooks, an online “bookshelf” that lets users store their purchased content, and software that converts content to the company’s eBook format.
·         Some experts suggest that new entrants in the tablet market should appear such as Amazon. If it is the case, Amazon would enjoy growth again as an online publisher and manufacturer, which it is already doing with the Kindle.
Louis Rhéaume
Infocom Intelligence
louis@infocomintelligence.com
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