Palm Slips, Pocket PC Gains In Europe

Published: 10 May 2001 y., Thursday
Sales of Pocket PCs, and particularly Compaq's iPAQ handheld, surged in Western Europe in the first quarter of 2001 while Psion handhelds lost ground and Palm had mixed results, according to a new study released Tuesday by U.K. market research firm Canalys. Palm remains the market leader in Europe and increased its unit sales, but its market share slipped in the first quarter of 2001, according to Canalys. The firm reports Palm's market share at 41.3 percent in the first quarter compared to 52.1 percent in the same quarter a year ago. As in the U.S., some of Palm's market share erosion came at the hands of Handspring, which reported 7.2 percent of the handheld market, compared to negligible market share the year before. However, Compaq emerged as the biggest competitor to Palm, according to the report. Compaq, which had been suffering from short supply of its handhelds, had just under 12 percent of the European market share for handhelds in the first quarter of the year, compared to only 2.2 percent in the same quarter the previous year. U.K.-based Psion, a long-time favorite in the European market, saw its market share slide by half, the study found. Psion had a 8.9 percent market share in the just-ended quarter compared to 19.1 percent a year ago. Overall unit sales more than doubled compared to the previous year, which meant that most vendors that lost market share still sold more units, according to the report. The exception was Psion, which sold 5 percent fewer units, according to Canalys.
Šaltinis: allnetdevices.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

"Goner" Virus Can Use ICQ To Spread

A brand new worm slithering through the Web is getting passed by Microsoft Outlook home and businesses users and is so bad it has the potential of wiping out complete files. more »

Court: U.S. law trumps domain decisions

Decisions by international arbitrators in cybersquatting cases can be challenged in U.S. court, an appeals panel has ruled. more »

Business users victims and villains in Goner outbreak

Business users were the worst offenders in this week's spread of the Goner worm and many firms were slow to update antiviral protection during the outbreak. more »

New Zealand Medical Journal Scraps Paper For Web

Ending 114 years of tradition, one of New Zealand's oldest journals will move entirely to the Web and cease paper publication next year. more »

Internet World Fall 2001 means business

The unrelenting momentum of the Internet as a tool for employing creative and cost-effective new ways of doing business will be the driving theme of next week's Internet World Fall 2001 trade show in New York. more »

PCs Still Rule the E-Commerce Roost

According to research from GartnerG2, as much as 10 percent of the B2C e-commerce transactions in the United States will be done through devices other than the PC by 2005. more »

Mobile Commerce World: Mobiles outstrip landline usage in Sweden

There are now more active mobile-phone users than landline telephone users in Sweden. more »

The first victims

Philippine Hackers Deface Sites To 'Expose Flaws' more »

Memo details Microsoft response in EU case

Microsoft denied European Union (EU) allegations that it violated antitrust rules and misused its dominance of the computer industry. more »

Opera 6.0 for Windows Released

Opera Software has officially released Opera 6.0 for Windows. more »