Global shipments of PDAs reach 17.7m in 2006"”report

07 Feb 2007
00:00

(Associated Press via NewsEdge) Global shipments of handheld computers rose 18.4% to 17.7 million in 2006, with Research in Motion's BlackBerry showing strong growth, but Palm suffering a steep decline in sales and market share, Gartner reported.

In terms of operating systems for personal digital assistants, shipments of devices based on Microsoft's Windows platform grew by 38.8% to nearly 10 million.
Those shipments, by multiple manufacturers of Windows-based devices, increased Microsoft's market share to 56.1%, up from 47.9% in 2005, the research company said.

BlackBerry retained the top spot for PDA devices shipped, growing 10% to 3.5 million for the year, but its market share slipped from 21.3% in 2005 to just a shade below 20% during 2006, Gartner said.

Palm saw PDA shipments slide by 29% to less than 2.8 million devices, its market share plummeting to 11.1% from the prior year's 18.5%.

HP's shipments also declined in 2006, falling 24.1% to 2.3 million devices. Its market share fell by more than a third to 9.7% versus the prior year's 15.1%.

Gartner said the overall increase in shipments of PDAs was driven by growing demand for wireless access to email and the Internet. The research company found that 60% of the devices shipped were equipped with cellular connectivity, up from 47% in 2005.

The company's data draw certain distinctions between PDAs and so-called 'smart' cell phones that not all market observers would agree with:

© 2007 The Associated Press

© 2007 Dialog, a Thomson business. All rights reserved

Related content

Follow Telecom Asia Sport!
Comments
No Comments Yet! Be the first to share what you think!
This website uses cookies
This provides customers with a personalized experience and increases the efficiency of visiting the site, allowing us to provide the most efficient service. By using the website and accepting the terms of the policy, you consent to the use of cookies in accordance with the terms of this policy.