Nick Dillon
Nick Dillon is an analyst in Ovum’s Devices and Platforms team. Nick’s key coverage areas include mobile software platforms, mobile developer ecosystems and mobile devices, including and smartphones and tablets. Nick also covers connected media players, mobile internet devices, smart TV and games consoles.
Reports authored by Nick include the Smartphone Capability Analyser, Opportunities for Mobile Development in the Mass Market, the Blackberry Platform Outlook, Mobile Phone Vendor Performance Index, Mobile Application Download Forecast and Smartphone Forecast. Nick has appeared as an expert commentator on Channel 4 News, Sky News, Bloomberg TV, BBC Radio 5 Live and Reuters TV, and he is also regularly quoted in newspapers and online publications.
Nick joined the Devices and Platforms team in October 2010. Prior to joining Ovum, Nick was a communications consultant, working with telecoms and IT companies such as Ericsson, LiMo Foundation, Myriad Group, Dell, and Red Hat to help them plan, design, and execute their public relations and analyst relations programs. Before this, Nick worked at Rolls-Royce where he led a project to redesign the document management systems within one of the company’s primary business units. Nick holds a Master of Engineering degree in manufacturing engineering and management from the University of Nottingham.
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Integration is Sony’s best opportunity but also its biggest challengeBlackBerry Playbook OS 2.0: missing features arrive too late to save the tabletSony finally becomes multiscreen vendor with first own-brand smartphonesFacebook rocks status quo of app store model with launch of mobile platform- May 16 - 19:37 | RT @alpine_access: The At-Home vs. Brick & Mortar Webinar co-presented with @peter_w_ryan from @OvumICT is now available on demand: ...
- May 16 - 16:49 | Pleased to announce @Alemba to the line up of sponsors for #OvumITSM event in June. Don't miss it http://t.co/Zyylb628 #ITSM
- May 16 - 16:47 | RT @royillsley: KPMG say asset management must be 99.5% accurate otherwise corporate finances are incorrect, lets wake up and just do it ...







