Commodus
Diamond Member
- Oct 9, 2004
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Android is the most successful mobile operating system ever, by every measure except profits. It is not dying by any means, however that profits issue undoubtedly gives Google pause. It seems like no one except Samsung can consistently make money with Android, and Samsung profits are falling significantly. Other players like Huawei and Xiaomi are profitable, but they use AOSP mostly. It is almost like Google has re-created the Windows hardware ecosystem except without the part where the OS maker rakes in huge profits.
Google pulls in billions in revenue from mobile ads, so I wouldn't say it's a wash. It's just a very indirect model.
With that said, you're right that this is teaching Google the same lesson that Microsoft learned: when you give up control of the hardware, don't be surprised when it inevitably spirals out of control. OEMs are rarely interested in pushing the same agenda as OS developers, and competition usually devolves into a price war when you don't have unique software. Just ask Microsoft. It let Windows PCs fall into a spiral of ever cheaper, ever crappier products, and by the time it was desperately asking OEMs to up their game to compete against superior Apple- and Google-powered machines, it was too late.
That's why Apple isn't freaking out that it "only" hovers around 18-20 percent of the smartphone market. It might never get a majority share, but it has a genuinely unique experience that's relatively safe from race-to-the-bottom competition. Samsung doesn't have that luxury -- no matter how many billions it pours into marketing campaigns, it's still Just Another Android Vendor. All it takes is another Android rival with comparable quality and a better price to undo years of leadership.