THE TOP TEN
Samsung Galaxy S II 16.13%
Apple iPhone 4 16GB 10.24%
Apple iPhone 4S 16GB 5.50%
BlackBerry Touch 9900 3.79%
Apple iPhone 3GS 8GB 3.03%
BlackBerry Curve 9300 2.54%
HTC Sensation 2.16%
Apple iPhone 4S 16GB 2.01%
Nokia Lumia 800 black 0.17%
It looks like Microsoft has more work to do.
Part of the problem is that Microsoft has a habit of jumping into the market and, if there’s no success very quickly, they will jump out again.
Perhaps if they stayed for a awhile, they may move up.
Nokia has always waited till the last minute to produce something the public wants. They are still stuck in 1993.
They were on the right track with the N900. They just needed to further develop that. Instead, they started changing the OS before it was even released, and then abruptly changed directions and partnered with Microsoft.
Oh, and no apps to kill (there is no app task list/killer), the phone manages everything automatically. And my phone hasn’t needed to be rebooted in almost 6 months of usage. How many Android users can say that? Microsoft has a winner here with crappy marketing.