iPhone has 19.2 percent of smartphone market

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Apple's iPhone took 19.2 percent of the U.S. market for smartphones in the first quarter of 2008, according to research firm IDC's vendor survey.

Apple's iPhone, with a new model due out in the weeks ahead, took 19.2 percent of the U.S. market for smartphones in the first quarter of 2008, according to research firm IDC's vendor survey.

That was down from 26.7 percent of smart phones sold in the fourth quarter of last year, which included the holiday shopping season, IDC found.

Much of the slack was picked up by Research In Motion's BlackBerry, which took 35.1 percent of the market in the fourth quarter and then 44.5 percent in the first.

IDC analyst Ramon Llamas said the BlackBerry is now strong in the "prosumer" segment, as RIM has successfully widened the appeal of the device beyond the professionals who have been its core customer group.

Smartphones are designed for Web surfing and e-mail in addition to voice calls and usually have alphabetic keyboards or touch screens. They account for a growing share of cell phones sold, as prices descend and carriers complete their fast data networks.

IDC did not reveal the total number of smartphones sold in the quarter. Apple said it sold 1.7 million iPhones in the first quarter, including overseas sales.

Palm Inc., a pioneer in the category along with RIM, also picked up market share in the first quarter, when it grabbed 13.4 percent of smart phone sales, up from 7.9 percent in the fourth quarter, IDC said.

"Palm also did really well. It posted a sequential gain mainly on the strength of the Centro phone," Llamas said. The Centro, a smaller phone than Palm's Treo models, came out last fall for the Sprint Nextel network and was launched by AT&T Inc. in February.

But Palm's market share is down from 23 percent in the first quarter a year ago, apparently the victim of the iPhone, which went on sale late last June. RIM's market share is also down from last year, when it sold 48.7 percent of U.S. smartphones in the first quarter.

No. 4 in market share in the most recent quarter was Samsung Electronics, with 8.6 percent, up from 5.1 percent in the fourth quarter, a rise Llamas credited to the availability of the BlackJack on Verizon Wireless.

Motorola, which is struggling in the overall cell phone market, did poorly in smartphones as well, dropping from a 7.5 percent share in the fourth quarter to 2.6 percent in the first.

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