Arab Times

Smartphone the center of US tech universe: survey

‘An all-purpose device’

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WASHINGTON, Oct 29, (AFP): The smartphone is the tech story for Americans these days: most adults have one, and growth has overshadow­ed that of all other electronic gadgets.

A Pew Research Center report released Thursday found 68 percent of Americans use a smartphone, compared with 35 percent in 2011.

But the figures are much higher, or “near-saturation levels” for some groups such as those between 18 and 29 years old (86 percent), those between 30 and 45 (83 percent) and people earning at least $75,000 annually (87 percent).

Increased smartphone adoption has come amid little or no growth in many other electronic­s categories such as desktop computers, gaming consoles, MP3 players and e-readers.

Tablet The tablet market has been expanding — with 45 percent of US adults saying they own a tablet computer, up from four percent in 2010 — but growth has cooled over the past two years, Pew researcher­s found.

Global surveys have shown the smartphone market is still growing, led by emerging markets, while tablet sales are in decline.

“We don’t ask people why they do not use a particular device, but these data suggest how the rise of smartphone­s has been a major story in the universe of connected gadgetry,” said Lee Rainie, who heads Internet and technology research at Pew.

“These changes in device ownership are all taking place in a world where smartphone­s are transformi­ng into allpurpose devices that perform many of the same functions of specialize­d technology, such as music players, e-book readers or even gaming devices.”

The researcher­s write that the rise of the smartphone “has had a major social, political and cultural impact” and “has changed the way people reach their friends, obtain data and media, and share their lives.” er, down from a 2010 high of 47 percent.

Just 14 percent said they own a portable game device, similar to 2009 levels, and the percentage of e-reader owners fell to 19 percent this year from 32 percent in 2014.

For tablet computers, the 2015 ownership figure of 45 percent is “statistica­lly the same” as the 2014 level of 42 percent, the report said, noting decelerati­ng growth since tablets became popular a few years ago.

Pew found that younger adults and those from more affluent background­s are more likely to own tablets, including 62 percent of college graduates and 67 percent of those earnings $75,000 or more.

The report was based on two surveys: one conducted among 1,907 adults from March 17 through April 12 and a second survey from June 10 through July 12 of 2,001 adults. The margin of error for the full sample was estimated at 2.6 percentage points, and higher from some subgroups.

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