macnn/electronista

05/21/2008, 2:50pm, EDT

Wednesday, May 21st

US mobile web use twice that of UK

Americans browse the web on their cellphones almost twice as often as their British counterparts even without the help of web-friendly devices like the iPhone, according to a new study by M:Metrics. Despite the reputation of Europeans as more openly embracing smartphones, Americans in March were known to spend an average of four hours and 38 minutes per month on websites using their phones versus almost exactly two and a half hours for British users. The difference is largely attributed to the prevalence of flat-rate data plans in the US, which give customers either a block of data or unlimited access instead of the metering that more often exists in Europe.

The ratings only cover devices using the Palm OS, Symbian, and Windows Mobile, though M:Metrics argues that this pattern of increased web use reflects an overall trend that is almost certain to include the iPhone and other devices where web use is a strong component. Most phone users simply have more reason to browse sites, the study researchers say.

"Consumption is quickly evolving from brief transactions, such as checking the weather or flight status, to time-intensive interaction with mobile Web sites -- even without an iPhone," senior analyst Mark Donovan says.

A factor helping Americans is the prevalence of phones with QWERTY keyboards that allow Americans to participate in more text-heavy content than UK residents, who are more likely to browse using a conventionally-shaped phone. Separately, the gap between access speeds in each country is also closing as AT&T and other providers boost 3G coverage.

The choice of sites also varies between the two countries. Americans are more likely to visit auction sites such as craigslist or eBay, while British users visit social site Facebook as well as service-specific pages that include cell carrier 3, TV provider Sky, and the BBC. Americans tend to visit for longer, with a given user spending an average of 32 minutes per day on craigslist where their overseas equivalents spend 19 minutes on Facebook.


Filed under: industry, gadgets
Other story tags: AT&T, Facebook, BBC, 3, eBay, Sky, craigslist

, , 2comments, del.icio.us, slashdot, digg, buzz
2 comments
Reader Reactions (Please use <i></i> for italic text)

subscribe to comments
for this article




Expand All   Global Settings

Wow!

0
05/21, 4:46pm, EDT

What a useless study! The first paragraph points the reason to the difference:

The difference is largely attributed to the prevalence of flat-rate data plans in the US


Then we get to the contradiction in the article.

First, Most phone users simply have more reason to browse sites, the study researchers say.

then we get...

The choice of sites also varies between the two countries. Americans are more likely to visit auction sites such as craigslist or eBay, while British users visit social site Facebook...

I'm sorry, but facebook and craigslist are not "reasons" as much as "well, I've got nothing better to do, let me go check out what women are looking to get together for some sex this afternoon".

Fresh-Faced Recruit
Joined Aug 2001
User is offline

Testicular

2
05/21, 4:57pm, EDT

I mean Testudo... Well I guess we now know where you spend most of your time at each afternoon... other than in here posting useless responses to EVERY article.

Fresh-Faced Recruit
Joined Oct 2006
User is offline
Your Comments

In order to post comments: If you are a registered member, please login with your MacNN Forums username and password otherwise please uncheck the checkbox below.


Registered Member?
macnn forums login:

macnn forums password:

Not a member of the MacNN forums? Register now for free.

AT&T Cell Phones: Get your next AT&T phone at 1800mobiles.com

Check Out the VIERA from Panasonic!: Enter a New Visual Era with Panasonic VIERA HDTVs. An Enhanced Experience.

IT Education and Training at University of Phoenix®: View our complete list of Information Technology Courses and Programs. Official Site.

Get to speed with Adobe After Effects CS4- fast!: Free CS4 chapter download, sample tutorials, expert insight from Chris & Trish Meyer, and more!

Buy from The Apple Store, iTunes.com, Amazon.com, TechDepot, OfficeDepot, Computers4Sure, or donate.