Apple continues to lead the pack in the U.S. as a smartphone make. Â Â To iPhone users, thatâs probably not a surprise. Â iPhone users tend to be loyal fans.
More than 39 percent of mobile subscribers in the 3 month average ending April used Apple smartphones, comScore reports. Thatâs more than any other smartphone maker.
And popularity is growing. Â Aprilâs figures are a 1.4 percent increase over Appleâs share of the market as measured in January. The companyâs market share in this category actually increased by nearly a full percentage point over its closest competitor, Samsung.
Here is how the rest of the smartphone market breaks down:
Samsung was next, with 22 percent of the market, up just over half a percentage point since January. These figures could change in favor of Samsung if the company sees customers confidently buying its Galaxy S4 smartphone or its competitively priced Galaxy S4 Mini (when itâs released).
Phone makes HTC (9.7%), Motorola (8.6%), and LG (7%) follow.
If you count by operating platforms â" instead of phone makers â" the story is different.
Googleâs Android continues to dominate in the smartphone operating system market. This market is measured by the number of subscribers using the Android operating system, versus a particular make of phone.
According to comScoreâs MobiLens service, over half of the 138.5 million smartphone users in the U.S. have phones running Googleâs Android platform. But Androidâs lead among operating systems decreased nearly two full percentage points from January to April.
Appleâs iOS, of course, is next at 39% and saw a 1.4 percent increase as mentioned above.
BlackBerry and Windows phonesâ market shares each dropped a bit, less than a percentage point over the same period, according to the MobiLens survey.
MobiLens gets its information from a nationwide sample of smartphone subscribers over the age of 13. Only primary mobile phone numbers are used to collect data.
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