Fundamentally, these seem to be the common traits: Smartphones are voice-centric devices (voice is the primary function, data is secondary) that offer PDA-like capabilities, whereas PDAs or Personal Communicators (such as most BlackBerries) may offer voice capabilities, but they are data-centric. Smartphones are generally capable of one-handed operation, while PDAs generally require use of both hands.
Smartphone features tend to include Internet access, e-mail access, scheduling software, built-in camera, contact management, GPS navigation software and occasionally the ability to read business documents in a variety of formats such as PDF and Microsoft Office. In the CTIA conference held in Atlanta, Georgia in March 2004, incorporation of television into the smartphone was among the topics discussed.
The first smartphone was called Simon designed by IBM in 1992 and shown as a concept product that year at COMDEX, the communications industry trade show held in Las Vegas, Nevada. It was released to the public in 1993 and sold by BellSouth. Besides a mobile phone, it also contained a calendar, address book, world clock, calculator, note pad, e-mail, and games. Customers could also use a stylus to write directly on its screen to create facsimiles and memos.
As of 2004 smartphones were an increasingly large part of the mobile telephone market. According to the analysts, Canalys, smartphone shipments increased more than 100 percent from the second quarter of 2004 to the second quarter of 2005 with more than twelve million devices shipped in the latter period *. It is expected that in a few years most phones sold (except for disposable phones) will be considered "smart".
Recent information *] regarding smartphone market share from IDC show that Symbian was continuing to dominate the smartphone market, shipping 24 million phone centric Series 60 phones, and approximately 3 million more PDA centric phones. This constituted 48.5 and 6 percent of the smartphone market respectively, for a total market share for Symbian of 54.5 percent. This was down slightly from the 56 percent market share in 2004, but it constituted a 120 percent growth in unit shipments year on year.
The next largest smartphone OS in 2005 were Linux based handhelds. 11.6 million of such devices were shipped in 2005, forming 23.5 percent of the market, and a 360 percent year on year growth in unit shipments from 2004.
Following this was the Microsoft Windows Mobile phone platform (available in two versions: the phone-centric Windows Mobile for Smartphone OS, which shipped 4.5 million devices in 2005 (9 percent market share) and the more PDA-centric Windows Mobile Phone Edition, which shipped 2 million devices for a 4 percent market share). This was a 100 percent growth in unit shipments from 2004.
Last was the PalmOS operating system. This shipped 1.75 million devices in 2005 for a 3.5 percent market share. This was a 30 percent increase in unit shipments from 2004, and a 3.5 percent drop in market share from 2004.
There is a further 2.75 million devices which ship with various other OS's. They together formed 5.5 percent of the market, down from 14 percent of the market in 2004, indicating a consolidation behind the three fastest growing mobile OS's, Symbian, Linux and Windows Mobile.
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