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Ok then. How about having the total number of different phones that are in the different 100% samples?
This would allow us to see the raw numbers. How many iPhones, how many Blackberries etc.
Sure, as a market matures the % of the market taken by the first to market will drop as other players enter the scene.
I have an iPhone 3G and used to have a BBerry but I hardly ever browse the web with either of them. As one poster said, there are many apps that give me all the data access I want or I might even browse those sites that are not counted in this survey.
I know that all my own sites are not in this as I refuse to let any webcounters/tracker anywhere near my web pages.
What I'm trying to say is that taken out of context, the percentage figures are pretty meaningless. It is like extrapolating the total number of cars on the road from counting the traffic on one highway for one day.
You're the one doing the extrapolating. Nobody is talking about these figures being indicative of sales figures (in fact, I specifically mention they're not in the article), except for you.
what these figures indicate is that in mobile browsing, something more or less launched by the iPhone and can thus be seen as a traditionally iPhone-heavy area, Android is starting to take over. That's big.
You should think twice before concluding anything based on these stats.
Another possible conclusion would be that iPhones users are more and more switching from mobile Web to dedicated apps and that more and more iPhone users are willing to pay for apps compared to Android users (paid apps does not include ads).
Conclusion: iPhone app store is more and more successful and become a real money maker for developers while Android users are interested mostly in free apps or are using mobile web because there is not enough native free apps.
Your conclusion or mine?
Edited 2010-03-29 11:54 UTC





Member since:
2005-06-29
Unless you have both sets of data, one on its own is pretty meaningless.
This isn't about that. This is about showing that Android is making inroads into mobile web usage, which was, up until a few months ago, totally dominated by the iPhone.
You don't need sales figures for that.