Apple no. 3 in mobile computing market (if counting the iPad)
By Alexis • Aug 4th, 2010 • Category: Industry News
- Photo: Apple
All early signs indicate that the iPad is a very big deal, we can all agree. But did you know that, if the iPad were counted as a mobile computing device, Apple’s share of the mobile market would jump from seventh to third? Yes, that’s how big a deal the iPad is, according to IDC.
Leaping over them all
Currently, IDC’s report pegs Apple as the seventh-largest manufacturer in the highly competitive worldwide market for portable computing, with 2.47 million Macbook Pro and Macbook laptops sold this past quarter – a rather impressive feat considering the limited range Apple sells. If you add the 3.27 million iPads Apple sold in this last quarter, the total number of mobile computing devices Apple sold is 5.74 million units.
More importantly, the company’s ranking on worldwide computer sales would change if we added iPad numbers to this. More specifically, if IDC were to consider the Apple tablet as part of Apple’s mobile computing lineup, the company would leap to third in worldwide sales. Behind only Acer and HP. Put even more bluntly, it would place Apple above Dell, Toshiba, Asus, and Lenovo.
Not such a joke anymore, huh?

- Photo: Apple
When the Apple tablet was finally revealed after months of speculation, people were in a tiff about what it all meant. Tech circles poked fun at the ridiculous sanitary pad-inspired name (it’s still a silly name) and poked fun at it merely being an oversized iPhone. Arguments broke out over what it meant for computing, what it would be used for, and whether it would even sell.
Now the talking has ceased. All evidence is now pointing to the fact that people cannot stop buying iPads. Competitors are scrambling to catch up, and when their tablets finally reach market, they’ll almost all face a difficult challenge in catching up to the Apple tablet.
The only question that remains is should the iPad be considered as part of Apple’s mobile computing product range on IDC’s chart? Doubtless the competitors it would leapfrog would not be altogether impressed if it were. Apple itself probably doesn’t care, just as long as the company can carry on printing money.
Tags for this article: apple, macbook pro














