3GSM World Congress, BARCELONA and LONDON, February 13 -- Symbian
Limited, developer and licensor of Symbian OS(TM), the market-leading
operating system for advanced, data-enabled mobile phones known as
smartphones, today released the following unaudited financial and
operational figures for both Q4 2006 and the full year ended 31
December 2006.
Highlights - Full year 2006
- 51.7 million Symbian smartphones shipped to consumers worldwide in 2006 - a 52% increase on 2005 (2005: 34.0m)
- 108 Symbian smartphone models shipping from 9 licensees through over
250 major network operators worldwide at 31 December 2006 (2005: 60
models) - an 80% increase on 2005
- 65 new Symbian smartphones models commenced shipment in 2006 (2005:
36), 38 (58%) of these models were based on Symbian OS v9, 34 (53%) for
use on W-CDMA (3G) networks in Japan and Europe, 19 (29%) Wi-Fi enabled
- 110 million cumulative Symbian smartphone shipments since the formation of Symbian to 31 December 2006
- Symbian announced Symbian OS v9.3 optimized for convergence and
market segmentation with performance and feature enhancements, which
will begin shipping in devices in 2007
Highlights - Q4 2006
- 14.6 million Symbian smartphones shipped by licensees in Q4 2006 - a 34% increase on Q4 2005 (Q4 2005 - 10.9m)
- In Q4 2006, Symbian OS was used in products in many segments and
geographical markets - for example: Nokia E50, Sony Ericsson P990c and
Sony Ericsson Walkman W958c in China; Sony Ericsson Walkman W950i,
Nokia E61 and Nokia N92 in Europe as well as several NTT DoCoMo devices
for the Japanese market such as FOMA(TM) SO903i manufactured by Sony
Ericsson, FOMA SH903i manufactured by Sharp, FOMA F903i manufactured by
Fujitsu and FOMA D903i manufactured by Mitsubishi Electric
- New Symbian OS v9 models announced in Q4 2006 but not shipping as of
the end of 2006, include the Samsung SGH-i520, LG JoY and Nokia 6290
- 6,896 third party Symbian applications are now commercially
available, a 50% increase on 31 December 2005 (4,588 applications)
(Source: Symbian research, see Notes to Editors)
"I am pleased to report that Symbian continued its strong progress
throughout 2006, with licensees shipping a total of 51.7 million
Symbian smartphones in 2006. During Q4, Symbian's revenues grew to
GBP44.9 million - an increase of 30% on Q4 2005. The growth in revenues
was due to increased unit shipments and the effects of our new pricing
structures which came into effect on 1 July 2006."
Mass market volumes
The smartphone converged device is a proven phenomenon. With a
cumulative total of 110 million Symbian smartphones now shipped, over
50m in the last 12 months, the majority of which are 3G devices,
Symbian represents a large installed base of differentiated smartphones
in different regions and segments.
Recently, Pete Cunningham, senior analyst at Canalys said, "With the
rapid increase in demand for new features and services, smartphones are
migrating into the higher volume, mid-range market segments. Symbian
accessed this market successfully in 2006 and increased its volume of
smartphones selling at mid-range prices. In Q406 4.5 million Symbian
smartphones shipped at mid-range price points, an 86% share of the
mid-range smartphone market[1]."
Over the last 12 months, Symbian has announced a number of initiatives
to assist licensees to continue the growth of smartphone volumes - a
new pricing structure; the Freescale single chip reference design for
3G; and product features which enable the use of lower-end hardware to
reduce device build cost. In addition Symbian announced the sale of our
UIQ Technology subsidiary to Sony Ericsson which we believe will be
positive for the Symbian marketplace overall.
Optimized for convergence and market segmentation
With the range of devices from different licensees, the opportunity to
differentiate and target various segments of consumers, Symbian is the
natural choice for leading Internet service and media brands to offer a
great service experience on Symbian OS.
In Q4 2006 new, feature-rich Symbian smartphones commenced shipping in
several different market segments including business, music and mobile
TV. The Nokia N92 is the world's first mobile with a built-in DVB-H
tuner. The four FOMA 903i series, which commenced shipping by NTT
DoCoMo, all contain GPS capabilities for innovative location based
services. The Sony Ericsson Walkman W950i is a 4GB, touchscreen, 3G
music phone.
Symbian welcomed the launch in the UK of the X-series from mobile
operator 3, offering Sling Player, Google, Orb, eBay, Skype, MSN and
Yahoo! first on two Symbian smartphones: the Nokia N73 based on S60 and
the Sony Ericsson W950i based on UIQ.
Broadening Symbian developer community
Over the last 12 months Symbian has continued to improve the
development experience on Symbian smartphones through products,
programs and services such as the launch of the new Symbian Developer
Network (www.symbian.com/developer), mainstream tools
(Carbide.c++/Eclipse), new Symbian Affiliate Partners, the Symbian
Academy and Accredited Symbian Developer program. A survey undertaken
with Yankee Group in July 2006 indicated that on average around 58% of
Symbian smartphone users had downloaded and installed an application.
With the recent announcement of P.I.P.S (P.I.P.S is POSIX on Symbian
OS), Symbian is also committed in the long-term to bringing the volumes
of desktop developers and applications to mobile. P.I.P.S will help
improve developer productivity by enabling C programmers to more easily
migrate existing middleware and applications, either commercial or open
source, to Symbian OS.
Symbian Outlook
According to IDC, the smartphone market is expected to rise to around
250 million units by the end of 2010. As smartphones enter the
mid-range, the Symbian OS product roadmap addresses the elements
critical for success in the era of convergence.
"This is just the beginning of a new technology revolution which will
profoundly change people's lives. I am looking forward in 2007 to the
growth in take-up of mobile Internet services, location based services,
music, VoIP and Mobile TV. Openness, the momentum of the ecosystem, the
prevalence of high speed networks and the increasing adoption of
predictable usage pricing are all key drivers accelerating the adoption
of advanced devices and advanced services. I look to the future with
confidence that our market will continue to expand and that Symbian
will play a key role in this market expansion."
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