Apparently, the sweet spot in terms of mobile hardware is a quad-core processor, at least that’s what recent sales numbers show. According to analyst firm Berg Insight, high-end smartphone sales grew considerably in 2012. For devices with retail prices higher than €400 (before subsidized pricing) sales grew from about 150 million units in 2011 to 250 million units in 2012. In case you’re not very good with math (don’t worry I’m not either), that’s a 100 million unit sales increase, in just a year. Furthermore, Berg says that 40 million of those smartphones were powered by quad-core processors. Those statistics indicate that consumers are really hot and heavy for quad-core devices.
This is definitely a stark contrast to what many analysts were claiming near the end of 2011. They believed that the high-end smartphone market would slow down throughout 2012. It looks like their claims were off by a bit.
Berg predicts that 1.5 billion smartphones will be sold in 2017, most of which will be powered by a quad-core processor of some kind. They think that Octa core processors will belong to a niche market. Depending on the price of handsets equipped with eight-core chipsets, the prediction could certainly hold true.
Here’s what Berg had to say on the matter in their press release:
Shipments of quad-core smartphones reached 40 million units worldwide in 2012
Gothenburg, Sweden – June 18, 2013: According to a new research report by Berg Insight, sales of high-end smartphones equipped with quad-core application processors reached 40 million units worldwide in 2012. Total smartphone sales grew almost 47 percent to 690 million units in 2012, up from 470 million units in the previous year. High-end smartphones with unsubsidised retail prices above € 400 and low-cost devices priced at around € 100 and below contributed to most of the growth in the smartphone category in 2012. Sales of high-end devices increased from about 150 million units in 2011 to an estimated 250 million units in 2012. Going forward, most of the growth will come from low-cost smartphones costing less than € 100, followed by mid-range handsets.
The first smartphones with dual-core application processors were released in early 2011, offering more than double the computing power of the previous generation high-end smartphones. Sales of dual-core smartphones accelerated in 2012, reaching an estimated 250 million units, up from 70 million units in 2011. The first handsets with quad-core processors were launched in early 2012. A wide range of standalone application processors and system-on-chips (SoCs) that integrate application processors and cellular basebands are becoming available to address different price points in the increasingly competitive smartphone category. This will likely bring more choice for consumers, while product marketing becomes more challenging for handset vendors. “It becomes more difficult for consumers to make comparisons between handsets when application processor vendors introduce SoCs based on different CPU architectures and core counts, each with different performance depending on specific workload”, said Andr© Malm, Senior Analyst, Berg Insight. Berg Insight anticipates that nearly all of the 1.5 billion smartphones sold in 2017 will be equipped with at least dual-core processors and the majority will feature quad-core processors.