Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android OS dominate the new non-BlackBerry installations in enterprises across the globe between July and September 2010, according to Good Technology’s tally of what the mobility management vendor’s customers are deploying. Good’s mobile management tool is typically deployed in large businesses and government agencies, and so is a good proxy for overall enterprise adoption patterns. But it does not support RIM’s BlackBerry or Hewlett-Packard’s WebOS, so Good’s results do not include data on those platforms’ activations.
Within two months of its launch, the Apple iPhone 4, became the most frequently activated device among Good’s enterprise customers. The Apple iPad also leaped into Good’s Top 5 devices list that quarter, showing that enterprises and their users are already adopting tablets for business. But it’s not all about Apple: Android device activations continue to grow rapidly as more new devices come to market, with theDroid X by Motorola as the most frequently activated Android device in September, Good reported today.
Over a broader period, from May 1 through September 30, Good saw the following trends in new-user activations at its customer sites:
· Of iPad users, 70 per cent did not previously have smartphones activated, indicating that most iPad users were not traditional smartphone users, at least not at work.
· iOS devices represented more than 50 per cent of net new activations.
· Android devices represented nearly 30 per cent.
· Windows Mobile devices represented 15 per cent.
· Symbian devices represented less than five per cent.
For specific devices, Good has found that the top 10 devices ranked as follows: The iOS-based iPhone 4 accounted for about 35 percent of new activations in the third quarter, the iOS-based iPhone 3G S for about 17 per cent, the iOS-based iPad for about 10 per cent, the Android-based Motorola Droid X for about seven per cent, the iOS-based iPhone 3G for about six per cent, the Windows Mobile-based HTC Cedar for about five per cent, the Windows Mobile-based Samsung i637 for about five per cent, the Android-based HTC Droid Incredible for about two per cent, and the Android-based Motorola Droid 2 for about two per cent.
But looking at just the month of September, the data shows the fast rise of several new devices: The Droid X rose from six per cent in July to 11 per cent in September and the Droid 2 had five per cent of new activations in its first month (September) of availability.
iPhone 3G S activations fell from 20 to 15 percent between July and September, while the iPhone 4 rose from 27 to 32 per cent. The other devices’ percentages were farly level during that period.