Our smartphones have become indispensable for work, for socializing and for relieving boredom. Pew Research Center says more than 56% of Americans own one.And that's just the tip of the iceberg. Venture capitalist and former tech analyst Mary Meeker has pointed out that there's (only) about 1 billion smartphone users in the world compared to 5 billion mobile phone users. Her point: cheap cell phones growth is about to explode, so we're at the beginning of this cycle, not the end.
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So what can we do? For now, we can all just nod knowingly, create an emoticon or a hashtag (#iamonthephone) and maybe signal our frustration on our Facebook (FB) status.Or seek professional help.A recent poll on Psychology Today's "Reading Between the (Head)Lines" blog found that 73% of people would feel panicked if they "misplaced" their phone. Only 6% would feel relieved. Nomophobia -- the fear of being without your smartphone -- is apparently a very real thing.And often annoying to everyone -- both those on the phone and those around them.
People use their phones in the car, while walking on the sidewalk, at restaurants, at the movies, in class, at the supermarket, while watching TV, while using their computer, on planes, in bars, while having sex (it's true, at least according to Jumio and Harris Interactive), when they wake up, before they go to bed... The smartphone revolution has left us with one unfortunate legacy: Much higher phone bills. Almost half of Americans with mobile phones pay more than $100 per month, for example, and a significant chunk of that is the cost of the subsidized handset. Factor out the handset cost, and the average bill is closer to $47.hy5Ss3fg
Is there a way out of these crazy expensive phone bills? Of course. For starters, you can avoid smartphones entirely, and fall back on a cheap plan with a feature phone. But that's not a compromise most of us are willing to make. An increasingly popular option is going with a no-contract provider, like Boost or Virgin Mobile.During that span, much of the growth appears to have come from people accessing the Internet from smartphones and tablets and computers at work.The gap nearly disappears when smartphone ownership is factored in, especially among younger adults.
"GT-I9500 S4 Smartphones do offer a potential source of online access to individuals who might otherwise lack the ability to go online at all from within the home, even if that access is somewhat limited in comparison,” Pew reported. “And indeed, 10% of Americans indicate that they do not have a broadband connection at home but that they do own a smartphone.”A highly connected 46% of adults have both broadband at home and a smartphone, 24% have just home broadband and 20% have neither.
Samsung is postponing the launch of the its first smartphone featuring Tizen, an open-source, Linux-based mobile operating system that will compete with Android.That, coupled with news that Samsung is announcing its first-ever developer conference this morning, is fueling speculation that the Korean company will be launching Tizen, its first Tizen smartphone, and perhaps even the long-rumored S Cloud — a cloud-based infrastructure that will connect and synchronize Samsung devices — in late October, all together.
It’s unlikely Google is all that worried — in the short term — about the new competition for its Android-based mobile phone hegemony.If Samsung actually does launch Tizen and a Tizen smartphone at its upcoming developer conference, the mobile waters will get even murkier. Right now, developers are focusing on Android and iOS, the two smartphone platforms that cannot be ignored, with some rising interest in Windows Phone, the clear third-place platform right now.
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