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Predictions for 2007

Rafe once again gazes into his legendary Crystal Ball.

Revisiting last years predictions

The 2006 predictions seem just a little optimistic - however, as is often the case with such predictions, the main problem is that I was jumping the gun.

If you look back to Jan 2006, you'll see that I foresaw 20 or more S60 devices from Nokia - this was optimistic - there were, in the end, some 10 or so distinct devices, but if you include some of the regional variants or marketing (music editions) it is possible to get to more than 20(!) Samsung and LG did both show S60 devices, but I missed with the Lenovo prediction. I was also wrong about touch screen S60 devices too, it seems we will have to wait a little longer for these. I over estimated the number of S60 devices that would be shipped, though not by a huge amount; a contributory factor to this is that sales of OS 9 based devices took a while to take off.

Series 80, in the form of the 9300i, showed grace in age, although it looks like 2006 was its last hurrah. Looking back it has been a tremendously successful product line. It will be interesting to see how easily its E90 successor is accepted, as loyal communicator fans make the transition to a S60-based device in early 2007.

2006

UIQ has had something of a mixed year with highs at either end. 3GSM saw the announcement of the M600 and W950, but delays to all three UIQ 3 devices put something of a downer on the middle of the year. However, the recent acquisition of UIQ by Sony Ericsson and the release of the W950 in time for Christmas (just) point to better times to come. I foolishly predicted 7 new devices, but even if you count Chinese variants there were only 4! The delay in the first three UIQ 3 devices also means my predicted device shipment numbers of several million are at least 3 months too early.

The '100 million Symbian devices shipped' prediction was correct and Symbian licensees are now well on the way to shipping 100 million devices in a calendar year, a staggering number if you stop to think about it. The 'Bill of Material costs' prediction was probably not achieved, although it is getting closer.

I was also wrong about the resolution of Symbian ownership issues (we're still waiting on this), the release of OS 10 (we got 9.3 instead) and more new licensees (we're going to have wait a bit longer for this one), although I did get some minor software updates correct.

I did best in the general ecosystem predictions - Google, Yahoo and MSN have all started showing more interest in mobile matters, with specific attention paid to Symbian based devices in some cases. VoIP services have indeed become available, but as predicted have not, as yet, made much of an impact.

Finally to prove that not all the predictions were over-optimistic - there were actually more Symbian OS based NTT DoCoMo/FOMA devices announced than I thought there would be.

And so to my...

Predictions for 2007

Devices and Software

Symbian OS and Updates

MagazineThe Mobile Ecosystem

The Internet giants such as Yahoo and Google will continue to show interest in mobile, but progress is likely to be slow. However we can expect to see more of each of their respective services mobilised and a more coherent overall offering.
 

Challenges for the year ahead

The challenges facing Symbian and its ecosystem have not changed much from 2006. Symbian continues to struggle against the perception that it is Nokia-dominated. There is no escaping this, although healthy shipments of MOAP and UIQ devices should help silence even the most vocal criticism. With Sony Ericsson's acquisition of UIQ Technology, Symbian can now concentrate fully on the OS layer.

Rafe Blandford, All About Symbian, 2nd January 2007

Published by Rafe Blandford at 18:50 UTC, January 1st 2007

Categories: Comment, Hardware
Platforms: Series 60, Series 80, Series 90, UIQ, General, N-Gage, S60 3rd Edition, UIQ 3

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