Report: Android To Top 1 Billion Shipments in 2014

Shipments of devices with the Android operating system will surpass 1 billion units in 2014, according to a new forecast from market research firm Gartner. As it passes the milestone, Google's mobile operating system will account for nearly half of all device shipments in the year, predicted by Gartner to top 2.74 billion units.

The 26 percent growth over 2013 sales will also strengthen the operating system's lead over the second-place system, Windows, which the company predicts will be on approximately 359 million devices sold in 2014. In third place, iOS and Mac OS gained on Windows in 2013 and will continue to do so in the new year, with projected sales of about 344 million units.

"There is no doubt that there is a volume versus value equation, with Android users also purchasing lower-cost devices compared to Apple users. Android holds the largest number of installed-base devices, with 1.9 billion in use in 2014, compared with 682 million iOS/Mac OS installed-base devices," said Annette Zimmerman, principal analyst at Gartner, in a prepared statement.

Overall the device market, which includes PCs, tablets, untramobiles (defined by Gartner as tablets, hybrids and clamshells) and mobile phones, will grow 7.6 percent over its 2013 total of 2.3 billion units, according to the company, and will top 2.6 billion in 2015.

Mobile phones will make up the bulk of 2014 sales by far, with a projected total of nearly 1.9 billion units compared to second-place category PCs, both desktop and notebook, which the company projects to fall just shy of 278 million. Tablet shipments will surge to finish slightly behind PCs at 263 million for the year on the strength of a 47 percent growth rate, but will overtake them in 2015, according to the forecast, with 324 million tablet shipments and 268 million PC sales. Other ultramobile computers will lag far behind in 2014 with a predicted total of 39.6 million shipments, and will continue to do so in 2015 with a projected total of 63.8 million sales.

PCs are the only category to have declined from 2013 to 2014 and that trend is expected to continue, according to the company, falling nearly 10 million units to just 268 million in 2015.

"The device market continues to evolve, with buyers deciding which combination of devices is required to meet their wants and needs. Mobile phones are a must have and will continue to grow but at a slower pace, with opportunities moving away from the top-end premium devices to mid-end basic products," said Ranjit Atwal, research director at Gartner, in a prepared statement. "Meanwhile users continue to move away from the traditional PC (notebooks and desk-based) as it becomes more of a shared content creation tool, while the greater flexibility of tablets, hybrids and lighter notebooks address users' increasingly different demands."

More information is available at gartner.com.

About the Author

Joshua Bolkan is contributing editor for Campus Technology, THE Journal and STEAM Universe. He can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • Blue digital wireframe classical building structure

    Before AI, Fix Your Data

    Institutions don't have to solve every data problem before they can begin using AI responsibly. But they do need to treat information as a strategic asset — not a byproduct of operations — and start building toward AI-ready data now.

  • Digital cyberspace with particles and Digital data

    Report: AI Is Moving Faster than Data Trust

    AI agents are already in use or pilot at most organizations, but data visibility, governance and precision recovery capabilities have not kept pace, according to Veeam's new Data & AI Trust Gap report.

  • digital partnership handshake with glowing network effect

    Microsoft and OpenAI Rework Alliance, Loosening Exclusive Ties

    Microsoft and OpenAI have adjusted the terms of their high-profile partnership, signaling a shift in how the two companies will collaborate as competition in the AI market intensifies.

  • cyber security padlock

    AI Adoption Forces Trade-Off Between Speed and Identity Security, Study Finds

    AI adoption is forcing enterprises to trade security for speed — and identity controls are the first casualty, according to a new report from Delinea, a provider of identity security solutions for both human and AI agent identities.