Wow, 2011 was another crazy year in the mobile industry. The
industry was rife with action, growth, progress, conflict, winners,
and losers. We saw the birth of the Android tablet; the rebirth of
the Android, iOS, and Windows Phone platforms; the death of
webOS-based phones and tablets; the failed AT&T-T-Mobile
merger; and all sorts of industry records for apps, downloads,
sales, and much, much more.
Boiling an entire year's worth of industry events into a single
post doesn't do justice to the accomplishments contributed by all
of the people involved, but there were five stories that stood
above the rest in scale and importance to the industry. Here they
are.
1. Android domination. Android's success is
unparalleled. It had zero market presence three years ago, and has
since ousted every major platform to become the number-one
smartphone system sold. Android's ascent only recently curtailed a
bit, but Google is still activating new Android devices at the rate
of 550,000 per day with no signs of slowing down.
Beyond the raw numbers, Google revealed its best work yet in
Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, the newest version of Android.
Right now, Android 4.0 is available only in the Samsung Galaxy
Nexus, but that is sure to change come 2012. Android has seeped
into all sorts of devices beyond phones, including media players,
tablets, watches, and more.
The year 2011 belonged to Android and 2012 probably will,
too.
2. AT&T/T-Mobile merger. Whether you were
for it or against it, AT&T failed to acquire T-Mobile USA. The
acquisition plan was first revealed in March and played out all
year long, step-by-step as the process unfolded.
The deal was an attempt to consolidate the second- and
fourth-largest U.S. wireless carriers into a single behemoth that
would have wielded enormous market power. The Department of Justice
and Federal Communications Commissions, after reviewing the deal
for months, decided it was a bad idea. AT&T gave up, USD 4
billion poorer thanks to its break-up fee with Deutsche
Telekom.
3. Good tablets, bad tablets, ugly tablets. At
CES 2011 way back in January, electronics companies introduced 50
new tablets. Fifty! Few of them were successful. The tablet field
started the year crowded with hopefuls, but in the end, only a few
struggled to remain. The stand-outs are the Motorola Xoom, Samsung
Galaxy Tab, Apple iPad 2, Research In Motion PlayBook, and the HP
TouchPad. Even this motley crew experienced turbulence.
The Apple iPad 2 is by far the dominant tablet player in the
tablet space, selling in the tens of millions. Samsung's Galaxy Tab
is a distant second. The bad news is that RIM has nearly sunk its
own ship attempting to sell the bombed PlayBook. Worse, HP killed
off its TouchPad tablet after it had been in the market for barely
a month.
As much as we hate to say it, Steve Jobs was right about 2011:
It's the year of the iPad 2--at least as far as tablets are
concerned.
4. Four-G fight. Mobile and wireless
technologies have come a long way. Right now, the wireless network
operators are racing to build out their fourth-generation mobile
broadband networks. AT&T is deploying HSPA+ and LTE; Sprint is
working to switch from WiMax to LTE; T-Mobile is throttling up its
HSPA+ network; and Verizon Wireless is well on its way to
dominating the 4G field with its LTE network.
This strength of their respective 4G networks will play a major
role in how each of the carriers moves through 2012. Verizon has
the strongest foundation. Beyond the networks themselves, some of
the year's most exciting and advanced devices included 4G in one
form or another. 2011 was a banner year for the growth of 4G in the
U.S.
5. iPhone 5. Yes, I know there is no iPhone 5.
As Google noted in this year's Zeitgeist, the iPhone 5--something
that doesn't exist--was the sixth-most searched item on Google this
year.
"Consumers and analysts alike anticipated the release of Apple's
newest smartphone many months prior to its arrival," said Google.
"Rumored features included a larger screen, edge-to-edge glass, an
8-megapixel camera, and extensive voice controls. Many believed the
phone would be called the iPhone 5."
And yet it didn't happen. Instead, we got the iPhone 4S, an
iPhone 4 with a spec bump and a talking assistant.
Source: InformationWeek USA