Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Mobile
  3. Legacy Archives

Google Nexus One Crawls behind iPhone, Droid in Sales

Add as a preferred source on Google

Despite a whizbang introduction preceding this year’s Consumer Electronics Show and a generally positive reception by critics, Google’s Nexus One hasn’t found sales traction. Like Palm’s ailing Pre and Pixi, the numbers look surprisingly bleak for a well-hyped and highly anticipated handset.

According to Flurry analytics, Google sold just 135,000 Nexus Ones by 74 days after launch, compared to the Motorola Droid, which sold 1.05 million in the same period, and Apple’s iPhone, which sold 1 million. The numbers fall largely in line with the sluggish start Flurry witnessed for the Nexus One back in January, which showed even the relatively tame T-Mobile MyTouch outselling it by three to one in first-week sales.


Recommended Videos

Amazingly enough, the latest numbers only take the first-generation iPhone into account – sales of which pale in comparison to the much more affordable second- and third-generations.

As Flurry pointed out the first time it poked the Nexus One, a number of factors help account for the difference, including Verizon’s decision to launch the droid at the peak of the holiday shopping season while Google whipped out the Nexus One in the lull after, and the Droid’s $100 million marketing budget which helped stir demand.

Flurry tracks handset sales numbers using code it has embedded in applications in both the iPhone and Android stores. Although the analytics data the code “phones home” with is used by app developers to see how their apps are used, Flurry also claims its presence on 80 percent of all iPhone OS and Android devices gives the company an overview of sales through extrapolation.

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
Snapchat Planets: What’s the order, and what do they mean?
Snapchat Planets turns your best friends list into a solar system, and yes, your orbit says a lot
Snapchat Planets being shown on the Snapchat app on iPhone.

Snapchat is already packed with little symbols that can be weirdly hard to decode. You have streaks, emojis, badges, scores, Best Friends, and if you use Snapchat Plus, a tiny solar system that shows where you sit in someone’s closest-friends list.

The feature is called Friend Solar System, though most people just call it Snapchat Planets. It takes your position in a friend’s Snapchat orbit and turns it into a planet. From Mercury to Neptune, these celestial bodies signify how close a person is to you.

Read more
How to use WhatsApp Web
We'll show you how to use WhatsApp on your desktop or laptop
WhatsApp Web

As one of the most popular messaging services, you’ve already heard of WhatsApp. From its humble beginnings in 2009—two years before Apple introduced iMessage—to its acquisition by Facebook (now Meta) in 2014, WhatsApp has become the dominant messaging platform around the globe.

In recent years, it's grown even more potent with new features like video messages, self-destructing voice messages, the ability to edit sent messages, and more. We even finally got an WhatsApp iPad app in May 2025.

Read more
What is WhatsApp? How to use the app, tips, tricks, and more
From setting it up to mastering hidden features, here is your complete guide to WhatsApp.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

There's no shortage of messaging apps out there. The past decade has given us more options than we know what to do with, largely because smartphones demanded something better than plain old SMS.

Both the App Store and the Play Store are packed with apps that promise to revolutionize the way we communicate. Most of them didn't make it. The truth is, a messaging app is only as good as the number of people using it, and most apps never cross that threshold.

Read more