America’s New Mobile Majority: a Look at Smartphone Owners in the U.S. | Nielsen Wire
Have they always done this? Who the heck is still using WM?
Have they always done this? Who the heck is still using WM?
Anybody who wants or needs USB tethering without having to hack. Anybody who wants or needs network drive mapping out of the box without 3rd party apps. Anybody who wants or needs to do reg edits with dozens of available free editors, just for kicks. Anybody who wants or needs to sync their files or Outlook with their PC. Anybody who wants or needs a smartphone real cheap on eBay. There are more reasons but these are just a few that come to mind.America’s New Mobile Majority: a Look at Smartphone Owners in the U.S. | Nielsen Wire
Have they always done this? Who the heck is still using WM?
Anybody who wants or needs USB tethering without having to hack... Anybody who wants or needs a smartphone real cheap on eBay.
USB & BT tethering work right out of the box through ICS without having to resort to 3rd party apps, rooting or any other process. Sorry for not being more specific.
USB & BT tethering work right out of the box through ICS without having to resort to 3rd party apps, rooting or any other process. Sorry for not being more specific.
Shame the numbers are pre-Lumia 900 launch, would be interested to see if there's been any shift in figures.
America?s New Mobile Majority: a Look at Smartphone Owners in the U.S. | Nielsen Wire
Have they always done this? Who the heck is still using WM?
How do you figure? Office was, and always will be, king of productivity software. WM had it which is why it appealed to enterprise. WP7 made it even better with SkyDrive integration and Sharepoint. You've got it backwards, enterprise is first and foremost with today's WP7 offerings and consumers second. Don't believe me? Look at all the comments: lousy camera, no SD storage, no front facing camera (most models), no dual-core for gaming, and the list goes on.The 4% of WM users are businesses. Microsoft dropped the ball by not bringing WP7 business-ready out of the gate. They focused on the consumer side and now lagging behind at 1.7% after a year on the market.
Are these figures based on recent sales or just what a group of people they surveyed had? It makes sense that Windows Phone would still be behind Windows Mobile in terms of existing devices.
Well the good thing about life is that there is a constant influx of younger people, so that is still a good place to build from.The problem for WP is these numbers: Survey: New U.S. Smartphone Growth by Age and Income | Nielsen Wire
The younger age brackets are already mostly smartphone owners, so that boat has sailed.