Symbian has boasted
that a recent contract win brings the number of mobile phones that use its
operating system to 100. However, the firm seemed to be at a loss to name which
phone reached the magic number.
"There's a big question about what was the hundredth device because things
come out so quickly," Thomas Chambers, chief financial officer at Symbian, told
vnunet.com. "I guess the
most obvious candidate is the
Nokia
3250."
Symbian said it couldn't be sure because two other phones shipped on the same
day in other territories.
As part of its latest financial results, Symbian claimed it is seeing strong
growth in Japan, with 26 of the 100 handsets released being from that market.
The company also acknowledged a surge in China now that it had enabled local
script on its phones.
"Symbian is seeing very good growth in Europe, primarily driven by Nokia but
with some good follow-on products from other licensees such as
Sony Ericsson," said
Chambers.
The one market the company seemed happy to concede to its rivals is America,
which Chambers joked was "still behind the rest of the world" as there are not
so many Symbian devices in the country.
Chambers added that the US continues to concentrate on
RIM,
Microsoft and
Palm.
"America is a funny market in that everyone is used to using PCs there so they
tend not to have mobile handsets like we take for granted over here," he said.
Rachel Lashford, senior analyst at
Canalys, agreed that PC
use had hindered the uptake of mobile services in the US.
"There is much higher PC and broadband penetration in the US so one argument,
which is correct to a certain extent, is that people have not seen the need to
have voice and data access on the move. I think that is changing now," she said.
Chambers pointed to other cultural divides between UK consumers and their
counterparts across the Atlantic.
"Americans tend not to think of mobile phones as fashion items, whereas here
it's a consumer fashion item and you wouldn't be seen without one," he said.
Lashford agreed that this is one reason why
Nokia has not yet replicated
its global market success in America.
"When you look at the devices that are popular, they're not really the funky
cool devices. It's more about mobile messaging," she said.
"They're still bought by individuals predominantly, but perhaps used more for
corporate applications."
Chambers admitted that Symbian is more interested in the high volume consumer
market, despite the lower cost of the handsets.
"You've got the enterprise users at the top end and we certainly play in that
space, but it's not where the big volumes are," he said.
Of the 100 Symbian devices that have been released, 66 remain on the market
and 34 have been withdrawn. Symbian claimed that there are another 56 products
under development.
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