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I also think Thom lives in a very remote part of The Netherlands. The parts I visit I see people pulling devices all day long and iDevices are not rare.
My living room is now full of women, so I fled upstairs. Three of them have an iPhone, one something else, but nobody knows what it is because she never uses it and my wife showed something on her iPad just after I demonstrated FaceTime which I used yesterday to locate groceries with real time directions of my wife.
I did some groceries today too, while waiting in line the girl in from of me pulled, what appeared to be, an Android phone while I did a Foursquare check-in on my WP phone, only to end up as an eyewitness to an attempt at shoplifting. And Sinterklaas was there too, but he didn't seem to have a mobile phone.
Before that I was at my son's soccer game, which he lost despite scoring a nice goal. Most of my son's team parents have either iPhones or want one if they could afford it. I didn't see many today, but it was rather cold.
Now my son is playing with 2 friends. He used my iPad, one kid also has an iPad and the other an iPod touch.
The place I see the most handheld technology is on trains. I see a surprising amount of Windows Phone, but the majority is still a reasonably even mix of iPhones and Androids. The only tablets I have seen anyone else using on the train are iPads.
As a gross generalization, highschoolers either have iPhones or low-end androids. Workers are all over the map, but my generalization based on people's appearances is that the more fashion-conscious tend to have iPhones, which leads to a predominance of them among women.
I don't remember the last time I saw a BlackBerry or an iPod.
I think it's safe to assume that pretty much everybody has a mobile phone in the Netherlands (Europe generally has more than 100% mobile phone penetration), even if hidden or switched off.
But http://stuffdutchpeoplelike.com/2011/11/24/no-36-sinterklaas/ ...interesting. Is the blog accurate?
("16,629,200 people can't be wrong, right?" :>>>) And what's really the deal with the servants, what's the word on the street so to speak?





Member since:
2012-03-14
<quote> Five, it's pretty clear iPads and iPhones are way, way, way more popular in the US than in The Netherlands. You see them everywhere, and people display them so openly. It was jarring. In The Netherlands, I always feel as if people are ashamed to take devices out of their pockets in the first place. No wonder US-based writers like Gruber and Arment think Apple dominates everything - if you rarely leave the US, it seems as if they do! </quote>
Because the opposite never happens and even if you never leave the Netherlands you're always right regarding the rest of the world...
Edited 2012-12-01 13:17 UTC