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  1. #1
    SMS
    Guest
    An interesting study on smart phone data usage by Cisco:

    <http://www.cisco.com/en/US/solutions/collateral/ns341/ns525/ns537/ns705/ns827/white_paper_c11-520862.html>

    In 2010:

    -Average iPhone data usage was 355MB/month
    -Average Android data usage was 209MB/month
    -Average smartphone data usage was 79MB/month (the installed bas of
    Symbian, Blackberry, and Win-Mo devices pulled the average down to only
    79MB/month).

    One interesting tidbit from the study was this one:

    "Much mobile data activity takes place within the user's home. A survey
    conducted by Cisco's Internet Business Solutions Group (IBSG) indicates
    that the percentage of time spent using mobile Internet at home is
    approximately 40 percent of total mobile data use, on average. The
    amount of mobile data use that is "on the move" is approximately 35
    percent, while the remaining 25 percent of mobile Internet use occurs at
    work."

    So if you look at the 355MB of average data usage per month on an
    iPhone, an average of only 124MB was used while not at home or work, and
    for Android it was only 74MB.

    The 35% used while "mobile" includes _everything_ outside of home or
    work _not_ just true mobile use. If you include non-home-non-work places
    where Wi-Fi is very often available (restaurants, schools, libraries,
    hotels, hospitals, car repair shops, coffee houses, parks, etc.) then
    the true mobile data usage would be even less.

    So the AT&T $15/150MB data plan would actually be more than sufficient
    for the average iPhone user if they used 3G data only when mobile, and
    Wi-Fi at home and work. Similarly, the PagePlus $30 plan which gives you
    1200 minutes, 2000 text/MMS messages, and 100MB of data, would be
    sufficient for the average Android user if they used 3G data only when
    actually mobile.

    The carriers are stuck in the middle of this. If they are able to
    convince subscribers to use Wi-Fi when it's available then subscribers
    will use far less 3G/4G data and could decide to switch to lower cost
    limited data plans. If they don't try to get subscribers to use Wi-Fi
    when available then those on unlimited data plans will rightfully expect
    to be able to use vast quantities of data, which is what got AT&T into
    trouble and caused them to drop the unlimited data plans.



    See More: Cisco Study on 2010 Smart Phone Average Monthly Data Usage--iPhone:




  2. #2
    SMS
    Guest

    Re: Cisco Study on 2010 Smart Phone Average Monthly Data Usage--iPhone:

    On 2/26/2011 9:13 AM, SMS wrote:

    <snip>

    > So the AT&T $15/150MB data plan


    Sorry, that was the short-lived Verizon plan, the AT&T $15 plan is 200MB.



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