iPhone, Dream N70, Palm Pre and BlackBerry Curve Top Smartphones, Says Admob

admornamarketshare.pngAdMob, published its August 2009 Mobile Metrics Repor and smartphone penetration continues to climb worldwide.

It lists the top 20 handsets and top 20
smartphones in each geographic region. While Symbian devices such as
the Nokia N70 and N95 continue to be popular handsets, the report finds
that the iPhone OS, Android and webOS have gained marketshare over
competing platforms in the last six months. In particular, Android has
shown strong momentum, with increasing usage of the HTC Dream (G1) and
HTC Magic (myTouch) devices in the US and Europe.

The top North American Smartphones in order were:

  1. iPhone,
  2. HTC Dream (myTouch 3G)
  3. Nokia N90
  4. Palm Pre
  5. BlackBerry Curve

The BlackBerry Storm came in at number 19.

  • From the August 2009 AdMob Mobile Metrics Report:
  • Worldwide
    iPhone OS marketshare has increased from 33 to 40 percent in the last 6
    months, with substantial share in all regions except for Asia and
    Africa.
  • Android
    growing rapidly in North America and Western Europe. The HTC Magic (my
    Touch) is a Top 10 smartphone in both North America and Western Europe.
  • Although its marketshare has been declining, Nokia continues to hold 12 of the top 20 smartphones devices in AdMob's network.
  • iPhone represented 50 percent of US smartphone usage in AdMob's network in August 2009, followed by RIM and Android devices at 14 and 13 percent, respectively.
  • Palm Pre also had a strong month, due to the addition of new publishers to the AdMob network, and captured 9 percent of US smartphone usage.
  • Nokia's N97 and 5800 XpressMusic touchscreen devices were the fourth and fifth most popular smartphones in Western Europe.

This data is based on usage of handsets and smartphone devices during the month of August in AdMob's network of more than 9,000 mobile sites and 3,000 applications. AdMob
market share is calculated by the percentage of requests received from
a particular handset; it is a measure of relative mobile Web and
application usage and does not represent handset sales. Additional
details and regional data are available in the full August 2009 report.

 

AdMob stores and analyzes handset and operator data from every ad request in its network to optimize ad serving.  Each month, the AdMob Mobile Metrics Report aggregates this data to provide insights into major trends in the mobile ecosystem..