I'd say WebOS is better suited to a tablet than Android is.
That said, Android has far greater market penetration at this point due to sheer number of devices running it.
I agree on WebOS... sadly, they have been too quiet with the pending HP buyout. The delay will likely hurt them quite a bit. I love the OS, but not sure HP can keep it afloat (in a meaningful manner).
Palm has screwed themselves with the lack of devices. Going well north of a year with the same device is an eternity in the smartphone world, especially when that device is a piece of junk from a quality standpoint.
The original Pre was sketchy in the quality department. The Pre Plus & Pixi Plus are both pretty solid devices.
Solid but outdated. The Pre was advanced when it was announced...nothing incredibly special by the time it released...and outdated by the time the Pre Plus came out.
WebOS is a fantastic system, I might put it #1 right now, but Palm really needs some cutting edge hardware to go along with it.
Yea, with the extra memory in the Pre Plus + OC, speed isn't the biggest problem. Its the low resolution screen (even Apple finally upgraded their screen res) and awful battery life that I consider the Pre's biggest issues.
Worldwide:
1. Symbian
2. RIM/BlackBerry
3. iPhone
4. Android
5. Windows Mobile
US only:
1. RIM/BlackBerry
2. Android*
3. iPhone*
4. Windows Mobile
5. WebOS
*Android sales overtook iPhone sales last quarter, but there's a good chance the iPhone will surge ahead by the time the next report comes out thanks to the iPhone 4's release.
Worldwide:
1. Symbian
2. RIM/BlackBerry
3. iPhone
4. Android
5. Windows Mobile
US only:
1. RIM/BlackBerry
2. Android*
3. iPhone*
4. Windows Mobile
5. WebOS
*Android sales overtook iPhone sales last quarter, but there's a good chance the iPhone will surge ahead by the time the next report comes out thanks to the iPhone 4's release.
Since he asked about OS's you would have to include iPod in the iPhone list, which I think would gove it a significant boost.
Oh well, anyone can manipulate statistics to show anything they want. Apple fanboys will insist on comparing the "installed base" because iPhone sales have been strong for years, or they'll sort by device manufacturer since Android devices are split among several manufacturers. Android fanboys will want to look at OS-based statistics for recent sales quarters or even growth statistics since Android is growing quickly.