Monday, March 15, 2010

Top Selling Windows Mobile Devices of All Time

Articles Written by: Mike Temporale on Saturday, January 31, 2009 9:30am
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During the Windows Mobile talk at CntrStg @ CES, Greg Sullivan mentioned that there are 11 phones that have sold in excess of 1 million units. That’s a pretty impressive achievement. I was curious to know more about these 11 devices. Like, how many are touch screen vs non-touch screen? And what manufacturers have made the best selling devices.  I’m sure you can guess some of the devices and companies that made it to the list.  But I wanted to know them all.  Thankfully, Greg provided me with a list of all the devices that have reached the 1 Million+ milestone.

The following list is in no particular order.  Other than some minor formatting changes, it’s exactly how I received it.

  • Samsung Omnia (SGH-i900/908/SCH-i910/M490)
  • Samsung Blackjack II (SGH-i617)
  • Samsung Blackjack (SGH-i607/600)
  • Motorola Q
  • HTC Touch Diamond (Diamond/Diamond-C)
  • Audiovox SMT 5600 (HTC)
  • HTC Dash (Excalibur)
  • HTC xv6800  (Titan)
  • HTC TyTN II (Tilt/Kaiser)
  • HTC Touch (Elf/Vogue)
  • HTC P800W (Artemis)

There’s a total of 4 different manufacturers on the list, 3 if you consider that the Audiovox device was made by HTC.  Of the top 11 best selling Windows Mobile devices, 7 are from HTC including the Audiovox device, 3 from Samsung and 1 from Motorola. Further, there are 6 Windows Mobile Pro devices (touch screen) and 5 Windows Mobile Standard (non-touch) devices. And of those non-touch screen devices, 4 out of 5 are messenger style devices – that’s devices with a front facing QWERTY. Another interesting fact is that 7 out of 11, or just over 63% of these devices have a QWERTY on them. 

I really have to wonder if the current trend by carriers and manufacturers to focus on iPhone like devices is such a smart move. With QWERTY being so predominate on the top selling devices, and over 45% of the top selling devices are non-touch screen, there is a definite trend of successful non-iphone like devices. I hope the manufacturers and carriers can see past the iPhone and work towards being original and different once again.