Strategy Analytics have <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssConsumerGoodsAndRetailNews/idUSLU3571120090730">released their mobile market estimates for the last three months</a>, and it has been a great quarter for Samsung and LG, the world's number two and three phone makers. Their share of the market keeps going up. <br/> Samsung and LG are clearly on the up, and those in the know expect this trend to continue. Who is losing out to the new guys? If you look at how the market has changed over the last few years, you see a few pretty interesting trends... There have been a few major shifts handset business: the downfall of Motorola and Sony Ericsson, the rise of LG an Samsung, and the emergence of new niche competitors like Apple and Research in Motion (see the growth of the "others" category). Nokia remain king of the castle, and no matter how cool the new kids on the block might seem, our friends from Finland remain uniquely capable of pumping out handsets in the hundreds of millions, in . If you are an Parsi-speaking Indonesian fisherman with one arm and a preference for clamshell phones with GPS, no radio and big buttons, there is probably a Nokia designed especially for you. Interestingly, although the mass marketeers like Nokia and Samsung now run the market, the big money is at the margins. , while the iPhone and BlackBerry account for just 3% of the total mobile market, they .