▲ | thewebguyd 3 days ago | |||||||
Yeah I doubt the foldables are driving it. I also bet the numbers will change now that the 17 is out. These things are cyclical, and whomever releases first in a year typically gets a small boost. Samsung releases phones twice a year, Jan/Feb and July typically, while Apple is once a year in the fall. These numbers are also only for one quarter. Don't get me wrong, I'd love to see Android's market share increase in the US, and I say that as an iPhone user. Apple's marketshare, especially amongst young people in the US is not beneficial at all, it's effectively a monopoly, and with iMessage popularity here it causes a communications lock-in effect. But, I'm doubtful without seeing a full years worth of numbers or a more consistent increase. Or maybe people are finally tired of Apple stagnating and are finally open to trying the other side. | ||||||||
▲ | MBCook 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
A separate point they made on the same episode is that when Apple releases a foldable phone (rumored for next year) it might significantly increase the number of foldable sold for all brands. It would give the idea of foldable phones a big visibility boost so more people would know they exist, thus perhaps more would buy them. Think about how popular MP3 players were before the iPod, and how popular they were after even for non-Apple ones. It raised a lot of awareness. It’s an interesting idea. Personally I have a hard time seeing a foldable phone being something I would be interested in. But I’m curious to see Apple’s take. | ||||||||
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