Nearly Half of American Adults Are Smartphone Owners
First time accepted submitter saiful76 writes "Nearly half (46%) of American adults are smartphone owners as of February 2012, an increase of 11 percentage points over the 35% of Americans who owned a smartphone last May. Two in five adults (41%) own a cell phone that is not a smartphone, meaning that smartphone owners are now more prevalent within the overall population than owners of more basic mobile phones."
Other than the "convenience" of being able to get at your email, a crutch for a stunted sense of direction, and a safety net for poor before-hand planning, the only reason I can see for having a smartphone is for keeping yourself entertained on the go. That brings me to: are people's minds so empty that they can't stand just a bit of quiet time without outside stimulation? Somehow we've been doing it for millennia without going completely bonkers, just sayin'.
Of that 46% know how to use their smart phone to it's full potential. Most of them just have them because it is the "in thing" to own.
When electronic calculators started surfacing back in the 1960's/1970's, students stop memorizing the multiplication tables
Now it's the turn of the smartphone that will affect a whole new generation of people
Used to be that we know the address of a friend of ours
No more
With smartphone/tablets, you don't need to remember anything - by just tapping on the glass panel you will get all the info that you need
The more gadgets we surround ourselves, the dumber we will become
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
The other 54% must have realized that the offerings in this country are so third world they might as well just go with the cheapest, most basic offering because their peers expect them to have a cell phone. The other 46% think they're actually getting a good deal paying $80 or more a month for bandwidth caps, high latency, and cell phones with half their features turned off because America's mobile infrastructure is so crappy it can't handle what would, in the rest of the first world, be considered basic service.
#fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
Everything now is a bloated smartphone with poor reception and even poorer battery life
At some point, this market will reach saturation. Then the service providers will have to compete on something like price or service to keep market share up. Hopefully, this will be good for the users of these fine machines.
The determined Real Programmer can write Fortran programs in any language.
For police, smartphones are the DNA or fingerprints of the 21st century. Soon every crime investigation will start with "any DNA on scene?" followed by "Who do the tower logs say was in the area at the time of the crime?"
I chose to have a house down-payment rather than spending ~$1000/year on a phone...
I believe this is another example of early adopter-itis
True, at one (recent) point if you wanted a iphone you were writing a check for $120 per month for 2 years plus $500 upfront is more like $1500/year. So, I heard the price and "Forget about it, I'm priced out so I don't care anymore". Much like I don't bother following the price of sailboats over 50 feet long, or the new Ferrari market.
I "upgraded" in December from paying about $7/month for a dumb phone to a shocking $20/month for an android phone. So far so good.
Another example of early adopter-itis is when first released a picture window sized TV would have cost more than a (cheap) new car, so I ignore the entire market for years. To my complete amazement last fall when my old SD CRT was failing after 25 years of service, a picture window sized TV only costs about as much as a picture window, so I bought one. The TV shows and movies continue to suck, but now they suck in higher res, and my wife is happy, and it was very cheap.
I intentionally removed myself from the market when first released because the price was insane. Now its cheap and I'm shocked to be in the market. This happens over and over...
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger