Austin, Texas - January 8, 2009 - Driven by strong consumer and enterprise demand for a wide range of Wi-Fi-enabled devices, from smart phones to mini notebooks, Wi-Fi chipset sales jumped 26 percent in 2008 to 387 million, according to new statistics released today by the Wi-Fi Alliance and In-Stat.
"Wi-Fi has solidified its position as an essential technology for the home and the enterprise in 2008, and we expect our strong growth trajectory to continue," said Edgar Figueroa, executive director of the Wi-Fi Alliance. "Wi-Fi is a feature that users have come to expect in a wide array of products, and device makers are including Wi-Fi in everything from handsets to mini-notebooks to media players."
Highlights from the In-Stat findings examining Wi-Fi chipset sales by category:
•· Cellular-Wi-Fi Phones: 56 million units shipped (up 52 percent)
•· Stationary Consumer Electronic Devices (gaming consoles, digital televisions, set-top boxes, printers): 48 million units shipped (up 51 percent)
•· Portable Consumer Electronic Devices (handheld games, cameras, portable music players): 71 million units shipped (up 33 percent)
•· Notebook PC's, Mini Notebooks, Ultra Mobile Devices, Mobile Internet Devices: 144 million units shipped (up 23 percent)
"Wi-Fi has withstood the current economic conditions better than most other technologies, and we expect to see continued momentum into 2009," said Victoria Fodale, research analyst at In-Stat. "The technology is reliable, secure and extremely popular with consumers. In the handset category alone, we expect sales of Wi-Fi-enabled handsets to grow almost twice as fast as the entire smart phone sub-category."
For 2009, the Wi-Fi Alliance and In-Stat expect Wi-Fi sales momentum to come from cellular Wi-Fi handsets, portable consumer electronics, home networking, and mobile PCs. All handheld gaming devices shipped in 2009 will have Wi-Fi. Moreover, the 12 percent growth rate predicted in the mobile PC market will be driven by uptake of new alternatives to notebooks known as mobile internet devices or netbooks. These increasingly-popular devices, which all include Wi-Fi, bring internet connectivity and basic computing functions in a smaller, more affordable form factor.
"Consumers are demanding connectivity at any time, in any place, and manufacturers are meeting the need with a variety of affordable devices, including the increasingly popular netbooks," Figueroa said. "Wi-Fi is a key feature in making these products so attractive."
Wi-Fi CERTIFIEDTM 802.11n draft 2.0, introduced in June 2007, has continued its momentum over the past year. More than 500 consumer products have received this Wi-Fi Alliance certification for advanced Wi-Fi performance. More than half of the mobile PCs which shipped in 2008 support this advanced generation of Wi-Fi.