Apple's iOS beats Android 6:1 on the web

Also boots Linux from the No. 3 spot in OS usage online

Apple's iOS mobile operating system is now the third-most popular platform on the Internet, with a share nearly six times larger than Android's, a Web measurement company said Wednesday.

Collectively the devices that run iOS -- the iPhone , iPod Touch and iPad -- accounted for 1.1% of all hardware on the Internet last month, more than enough to shove Linux off its perch as the third-place operating system on the Web.

For the month of August, Linux fell to a 0.85 per cent share, the third month in a row that the open-source operating system lost ground. Windows and Apple 's Mac OS were the No. 1 and No. 2 operating systems on the Web, with 91.3 per cent and 5 per cent, respectively.

"It's something to take note of when a mobile operating system passes something that's been around forever," said Vince Vizzaccaro, a Net Applications vice president, talking about iOS overtaking Linux. "Mobile's growth curve is strong and mobile is becoming quite a phenomenon on the Internet."

Net Applications' numbers don't reflect devices sold or operating systems licensed or installed, but do show how much browsing people do from specific hardware and operating systems. And clearly, mobile users take to the Web.

"When you combine all the different devices, mobile has a 2.6 per cent share," said Vizzaccaro. "That's massive when you think about it."

As a platform, iOS has the biggest chunk of the total mobile usage share, easily beating rivals ranging like Google 's Android and Nokia's Symbian.

Android devices made up just 0.2 per cent of the operating systems that powered browsers Net Applications tracked last month. "Whatever the sales are, we're seeing iOS totally dominate the market on the Web," Vizzaccaro said. "iOS has nearly a 6:1 advantage over Android."

Competing sales claims are nothing new to the battle between Apple and Google for smartphone hearts and minds. According to Gartner, 10.6 million Android-based smartphones sold in the quarter ending June 30, compared to 8.7 million iPhones, putting Apple's device in fourth place worldwide behind Symbian, Research In Motion (RIM) and Android.

But the iPhone isn't the only device that runs iOS. In the same second quarter, Apple sold 3.3 million iPads and an unknown number of iPod Touches among the 9.4 million iPods sold during that period.

Apple doesn't break out iPod Touch sales from its all-iPod quarterly sales figures, but Touch sales have been brisk according to Apple. During the launch of a revamped iPod lineup earlier Wednesday in San Francisco, Apple CEO Steve Jobs said the Touch line was the best-selling of the four models: Shuffle, Nano, Touch and Classic.

Jobs also said that Apple has sold 120 million iOS-running devices since the original iPhone appeared in June 2007 and is activating approximately 230,000 iOS devices daily.

"People are throwing around a lot of numbers as to how many of their OSes they're activating per day," said Jobs. "We're activating 230,000 iOS devices a day. We think we're ahead of everybody."

Net Applications calculates usage share using data acquired from the 160 million unique visitors who browse the 40,000 Web sites it monitors for clients.

Read more about mobile oses in Computerworld's Mobile OSes Topic Center.

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Tags mobilesmartphonesApplesoftwareapplicationstelecommunicationPhonesconsumer electronicsMobile operating systemsMobile and WirelessMobile OSes

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