Off to a flyer
In case you haven't heard, China's quite a big market, so it's fair to assume it be a key component of the great mobile Internet land grab. A recent report from Morgan Keegan analyst Tavis McCourt reveals that, in the past year, Google has moved into pole position in the world's biggest market.
Allthingsd reports the revelation that the Chinese smartphone market tripled in the past year, with between eight and ten million smartphones sold. Even more remarkable is the fact that Android now represents half of that market, having no presence at all a year ago.
Meanwhile Fortune, from which we got the chart below, points out that the report has found Apple's performance in the Chinese smartphone market to be "somewhat disappointing" so far, but that it expects iPhone sales to improve as recent launches gather momentum.
As you can see from the table, Nokia does pretty well in China, which is one of the reasons it's still the global smartphone leader by volume, despite the more positive publicity around Android and the iPhone. But Nokia had 70 percent of this market a year ago, so it's losing market share rapidly.