The research suggests that there will be four billion mobile subscriptions by the end of 2008 after rapid consumer demand in emerging markets such as China and India.
But this increase will then slow as the market reaches saturation, according to the firm's forecast, which predicts that only Africa will have less than half its population mobile by 2011.
However, Informa expects mobile operators to adapt to the slowdown of mobile subscription sales by targeting lower-income groups and increasing broadband internet and mobile connectivity.
"Mobile broadband services, and in particular the evolution of HSPA, have reinvented the business case for 3G technologies," said Informa analyst Nick Jotischky.
"As a result mobile internet services are helping to provide operators with new business streams, particularly within higher-income groups."
Meanwhile, web giant Google has asked computer scientist Alan Kay to speculate on the 'future of mobile'.
Kay predicted a number of innovations including Smart Alerts, which she believes will alert mobile users when something needs their attention. This is likely to work in a similar way to eBay's texts to consumers when they have been outbid.
"One very useful scenario is that your phone knows you are heading downtown for dinner, and alerts you of transit conditions or the best places to park," said Kay.
Phones will also start to replace sensor devices, Kay predicted. "Traffic reports can be based not on helicopters and road sensors, but on the density, speed and direction of the phones (and people) stuck in traffic jams," she suggested.
Mobile market heading for saturation by 2011
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content
AI PCs shift from hype to revenue opportunity for partners
Think Technology Australia deliver massive ROI to a Toyota dealership through SharePoint-powered, automated document management
Promoted Content
Why Australia’s Industrial Leaders Are Turning to Dynamic Aspect for Dynamics 365 Business Central
Promoted Content
Have ticket queues become your quiet business risk?
Fabric workshops help partners tap into data services demand growth.




