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At places where people are waiting you're likely to see cell phones and other devices, like on the train.
I also have yet to spot a non-iPad tablet in the wild. When sales people visit me at work they often have an iPad to show stuff. Recently a bloke from Lenovo called me about Windows tablets and he would call again once they were out, but I haven't heard of him since.
BlackBerries have disappeared in my corporate setting, but apparently they are still popular with kids due to the BB messaging service. iPods due tend to show up in the sports world with runners and cyclers, but outside that sector only the iPod touch is seen by me (mostly used by kids).
I have only seen a WP once that wasn't owned by me, apart from a co-worker.
It's interesting that we see all these sales and usage figures, but real-life observation can be totally different.
It's natural, we're primed to notice more the expected things; also, local bubbles of popularity.
(kids, BB?... they're all either on S40 or LG Cookie & Samsung Star-like touchscreens, some on cheaper smartphones - but not BB, hardly anybody has those; similar with iPhone; but Android is becoming quite popular; or at least, that's what it seems at my place)




Member since:
2007-03-22
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.