Satisfaction with Apple's iPhone is at an all-time high with 79 per cent of users saying they're 'very satisfied' with the device, compared to 72 per cent in February – or so market research group ChangeWave has found. It compared the iPhone with other makes of smartphone device, with Palm faring the worst at just 22 per cent.

Again RIM's Blackberry scored second place behind the Apple iPhone, although its 'very satisfied' rating fell one point, from 55 per cent to 54 per cent.

LG and Sanyo are tied on 40 per cent each followed by Nokia (37 per cent), Samsung and Sony Ericsson (33 per cent), Motorola (32 per cent), then Palm (22 per cent).

iPhone squeezes Blackberry

The iPhone also scored a significant win over RIM's Blackberry when it came to future mobile phone purchases. 35 per cent of ChangeWave's respondents said they'd pick an iPhone within the next three months, a 12 point climb over its previous result. That puts it ahead of the Blackberry for the first time – it scored 29 per cent, according to Fortune's Apple 2.0 blog.

The headline findings of the ChangeWave survey are backed by separate research carried out by Rubicon Consulting, which showed that 80 per cent of iPhone owners declare themselves satisfied with the device, of which over 40 per cent are 'strongly satisfied'.

The iPhone challenge

Rubicon Consulting's "The Apple iPhone: Successes and Challenges For the Mobile Industry" white paper [PDF link] also reveals that:

  • The iPhone is expanding the smartphone market – 50 per cent of buyers have only ever owned a regular mobile before
  • 25 per cent of owners are using their iPhones as a laptop replacement
  • 75 per cent of iPhone owners are already Apple / Mac converts
  • One-third also carry a second handset in addition to their iPhone
  • iPhone owners are young – 50 per cent are under 30
  • 75 per cent do more web surfing than before
  • The most popular application is email

However the survey also reveals some significant drawbacks to owning an iPhone:

  • 40 per cent said they had trouble with websites they were trying to visit – particularly those using Adobe Flash
  • Owning an iPhone increases your phone bill – up by 24 per cent on average

Rubicon says Apple has proved to mobile phone companies it's possible to create an entirely new business, but warns: