Google announced via their investor relations page that the company has agreed to terms with Motorola for a $12.5 billion dollar acquisition at 60% premium. The boards of directors of both companies unanimously approved the transaction.
The deal puts Google head-to-toe with Apple, who has been a full-fledged smartphone manufacturer since they launched iPhone and iPhone OS in 2007. The acquisition of a handset maker is not an automatic win for Google, as they closed down their Nexus One store due to sub-par sales. A Motorola deal will put more of Google’s phones on shelves, but it also puts the search-engine company in competition with HTC and Samsung. 
“Motorola Mobility’s total commitment to Android has created a natural fit for our two companies. Together, we will create amazing user experiences that supercharge the entire Android ecosystem for the benefit of consumers, partners and developers,” Google’s Co-founder and CEO, Larry Page, said in a press release.
Google will benefit greatly from Motorola’s 17,000 patents on phone technology, as Google recently lost in a consortium against Microsoft, Apple and RIM for thousands of patents from Novell and Nortel Networks, a Canadian computer-networking company and a telecom manufacturer.
Googles stock (GOOG) closed down 1.82% at $553.50. You can view a video of CNBC analysts discussing the deal here.
Not a big surprise. What’s striking is that not one of the other 18 smartphones in the 2009 list — not the Samsung Instinct (No. 2), not the T-Mobile Sidekick (5), not the Palm Centro (7), not the LG Dare (9) — survived to make the 2011 list.
To be sure, Apple has released two models of the iPhone in the period covered — the iPhone 3GS and the iPhone 4.
But how many other smartphones have come and gone in those 27 months? And how many of the Androids that are so hot today will be around in 2013?
The Millennium Mobile Mix report in full can be downloaded here.
Assorted Slices is an editorial-based publication covering Apple Inc. and similar topics.