\nImage: Engadget<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n
iPhone: 64%
\nAndroid: 19%
\nBlackBerry: 9%
\nOther: 8%<\/p>\n
AdMob<\/a>‘s (PDF)\u00a0 numbers for Feburary are:<\/p>\n
iPhone + IPod: 44%
\nBlackBerry: 15%
\nAndroid: 12%*
\nOther: 29%<\/p>\n
My take, based largely on AdMob’s US numbers and StatCounter’s global chart<\/a>, is that Apple drives about 44% of US mobile web traffic in the US and about 40% worldwide and that its share is in decline everywhere while RIM and Android are on the rise.<\/p>\n
For a sightly different take on the accuracy of AdMob Statistics see Peter Paul Koch’s piece on QuirksMode<\/a>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
Image: Engadget At the iPhone 4.0 SDK release announcement yesterday Steve Jobs made the claim that the iPhone has a 64% US Mobile Browser “User Share”. An accompanying slide showed shares for all mobile browsers as: iPhone: 64% Android: 19% BlackBerry: 9% Other: 8% I’m skeptical of this number as it’s considerably higher than other estimates I’ve seen that put the iPhone’s share of mobile web traffic considerably lower. The source for the slide is given as “Net Applications, Feb … Continue reading