The Manila Times

Digital devices ownership drops

- JASTRA KRANJEC

FOR years, PCs, laptops and tablets have been losing the race with mobile phones as the number one device among all generation­s. Their ownership rate and usage continued falling in 2023. However, most other digital devices also saw a significan­t ownership drop last year.

According to data presented by Stocklytic­s.com, seven out of ten digital devices people use have seen an ownership drop in 2023. Tablets, gaming consoles, and VR devices took the worst hit.

Consumers worldwide showed that having a smartphone became even more prevalent last year. According to the Digital 2024 Global Overview Report, mobile phones and smartphone­s were the only devices, except for smartwatch­es, whose ownership rate increased year over year.

Surprising­ly, all other digital devices, including PCs, laptops, tablets, game consoles, smart home, TV streaming and VR devices, saw their ownership rates drop. However, VR devices have definitely taken the worst hit.

According to the survey, only 4.4 percent of internet users ages between 14 and 64 owned a VR device in 2023, or 21.4 percent less than a year before. This huge ownership rate drop shows the hype around VR devices has stopped.

Tablets saw the secondlarg­est ownership decline in 2023. After surging in the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic, global tablet demand dropped to far less impressive numbers. Their ownership rate proves this.

According to the survey, only 30.9 percent of respondent­s said they owned a tablet last year, or 8.3 percent less than a year before.

Game consoles follow VR devices and tablets, with almost a 6 percent year-over-year drop and a 19.1 percent share among internet users in 2023.

Statistics show TV streaming devices also saw a considerab­le decline in 2023, with their ownership rate falling by 4.8 percent to 15.7 percent. Smart home devices were also used less than before, with their share among respondent­s falling by 1.2 percent to 16.2 percent last year.

After losing the race with mobile phones for years, the market share of laptops and desktop PCs continued shrinking in 2023. One of the reasons is their high price tag and the fact that many consumers cut spending on tech after inflation hit.

Last year, 57.7 percent of internet users owned a PC, 0.5 percent less than in 2022. Their share in web traffic also declined.

According to the survey, 61.8 percent of respondent­s used a laptop or a desktop PC to access the internet in 2023, 5.8 percent less than a year before.

On the other hand, smartphone­s increased their share in total web traffic by 4 percent year over year, with almost 95 percent of people using them to browse the net.

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