Android is now the most-used smart phone operating system in the United States — a stunning race to the top from a platform that didn’t exist 25 months ago.
Nearly one third, or 31.2 percent, of U.S. smart phones ran Google’s Android OS in January, according to a study released Monday by comScore. That outpaced the 30.4 percent of American smart phone owners who use BlackBerry devices, which are made by Research in Motion.
The meteoric rise of Android began in late October 2008, when HTC’s G1 phone went on sale for T-Mobile users. The platform started to take off when the Motorola Droid went on sale in November 2009. Google’s mobile OS began 2010 with a 7 percent share of the smart phone market, but Android has grown by 2 points each month since, on average.
Android was in fourth place as recently as May 2010, but it outpaced Microsoft’s Windows Mobile in June. In November, Android overtook Apple’s iOS, which runs on the iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad. It conquered the mighty BlackBerry OS in January — vanquishing an operating system that had more than a 42 percent share of the U.S. smartphone market a year ago.
Google activates 350,000 Android devices each day, and there are more than 170 smart phones and tablets running Android, according to the search giant.
Much of Android’s success can be chalked up to Google’s open business model: Google licenses the mobile OS for free, allowing handset manufacturers to load the ready-made software onto their phones instead of paying a team of engineers to develop a proprietary platform. They can customize it as much as they like, too.
LG, HTC, Samsung, Motorola and dozens of other handset makers have jumped onto the Android bandwagon — and the ability to focus exclusively on the hardware allowed device manufacturers to start bringing phones to market much more quickly. In fact, the time it takes smartphones to go from concept to store shelves has been halved thanks to “Android’s law.”
Worldwide, Android beat BlackBerry last year, but it still trails Nokia’s Symbian OS, according to Gartner. Nokia recently announced that it would ditch Symbian, which has been rapidly losing market share, for Microsoft’s Windows Phone OS.
Nokia CEO Stephen Elop acknowledged that he had considered partnering with Google, but he said that Windows Phone offered more differentiation amid a sea of new Android devices.