I'm not surprised to see Blackberry gets a strong position as a business phone, and impressed with the placing for Android, as a relative newcomer.
Interesting to see iPhone doing reasonably well, but I think there's still some scepticism of it within companies. IT managers used to resist supporting the iPhone, maybe that is still the case.
Symbian's unpopularity is perhaps more of a surprise. It's an open source platform, and it still has a majority share of smartphones, which are seen as business machines. It also has a very vocal group of supporters, as I found on the site recently.
And Windows Mobile? Well, it's not doing so well in Europe, but there are places that use it.
Let's see what else comes up - this is starting to get interesting..
Peter Judge
Editor, eWEEK Europe UK
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I think Symbian is underated
I voted for iPhone but have never used BlackBerry so not sure how good it is.
These are interesting results so far.
I'm not surprised to see Blackberry gets a strong position as a business phone, and impressed with the placing for Android, as a relative newcomer.
Interesting to see iPhone doing reasonably well, but I think there's still some scepticism of it within companies. IT managers used to resist supporting the iPhone, maybe that is still the case.
Symbian's unpopularity is perhaps more of a surprise. It's an open source platform, and it still has a majority share of smartphones, which are seen as business machines. It also has a very vocal group of supporters, as I found on the site recently.
And Windows Mobile? Well, it's not doing so well in Europe, but there are places that use it.
Let's see what else comes up - this is starting to get interesting..
Peter Judge
Editor, eWEEK Europe UK