What’s also exciting is that there are some major players behind these projects – Mozilla is, of course behind Firefox OS, Canonical is behind Ubuntu Touch, and quite a few large players are behind Tizen, including Samsung. Firefox OS even appears to be courting carriers with an opportunity to run their own app stores. This app store opportunity naturally has carriers foaming at the mouth to re-assert some semblance of control: behold the Verizon app store! All apps are $0.99 and we’ll just bill you at the end of the month (like we used to do for all those ringtones you were accustomed to download back when we were in control of all things device-related before Apple destroyed that cash cow).
Naturally, we’re all eager to see how these new entrants fair. It reminds me of how interested I was in learning more about Windows Phone 8 and even Blackberry’s latest and greatest attempt at regaining some composure.
But then I remember this stunning fact: Apple and Google
together control nearly 9 out of 10 smartphones sold globally.
Even with industry heavyweight contenders (who are not new to mobile!) like Microsoft and Blackberry (who, we all should remember, owned the smartphone market before Apple got involved) haven’t really made a dent. Granted, it’s early to rush to conclusions, however, preliminary signs don’t bode well for either company.
The co-CEO of Samsung had some stinging criticism for Microsoft:
Smartphones and tablets based on Microsoft’s Windows operating system aren’t selling very well. There is a preference in the market for Android. In Europe, we’re also seeing lackluster demand for Windows-based products.
Blackberry appears to have some demand in the UK and Canada, a recently analyst T. Michael Walkley had this to say:
While we anticipate stronger near-term results for BlackBerry as higher margin BB10 smartphones sell into the channel, we do not believe BlackBerry can achieve sell-through market share levels to return to sustained profit levels
The salient point, nevertheless, is that neither Microsoft or Blackberry have yet to make a dent into the Google-Apple duopoly. And so while it’s easy to get excited about new entrants like Ubuntu Touch, the reality, at least for the time being, is that these operating systems will have little impact in the smartphone market.
After all, when your competition essentially owns 9 out of every 10 smartphones, evolutionary enhancements aren’t enough to break that stranglehold: you have to do something revolutionary. Besides, we’ve already seen this before: the iPhone was not an evolutionary offshoot of the Blackberry. It was revolutionary. Sadly, neither Ubuntu Touch, Tizen, nor Firefox OS appear revolutionary.
This story, "Hold your horses! It's still only a two horse race." was originally published by JavaWorld.