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Google: Smartphone Users Embracing PCs over Tablets ... For Now


Posted @ 1/25/2012 10:45 AM By Paul Thurrott

 
According to a study that was sponsored by Google, consumer usage of smartphones and tablets is on the rise, which should be fairly obvious to just about anyone. But the study also notes that increased smartphone and tablet usage has not caused consumers to abandon the personal computer. In fact, most of these users are comfortable using multiple device types, and far more smartphone users also use PCs rather than tablets at the moment.

"Mobile devices are mainstream," a post to the Google Mobile Ads Blog notes. "But our most significant findings centered on the clear consumer shift to smartphones. We partnered with Ipsos to conduct this research with a goal of gaining greater insight into consumer usage of mobile devices, the shift to smartphones and the emergence of tablets as a fourth screen."

I expected those four screens to be the TV, PC, smartphone, and now tablet. But if I'm reading this right, the study may be defining the four screens as portable PC, desktop PC, smartphone, and tablet.

The report says that usage in smartphones is up dramatically, with these devices now in the hands of 45 percent of consumers in the UK, 38 percent in the US and France, 23 percent in Germany and 17 percent in Japan. As important, perhaps, total mobile phone usage (i.e. feature phone and/or smart phone) now exceeds that of total PC (desktop and/or laptop) usage. And consumers are "clearly shifting from feature phones to smartphones," Google says. So it's only a matter of time before smart phone usage outpaces PC usage as well, I'd imagine.

(The smartphone/feature phone mix in the US is almost equal right now, so given the usage trends shown here I'd expect smart phone usage to surpass that of feature phones in this first half of 2012. But that's just the US; these figures vary from country to country.)

That said, consumers today are very comfortable using PCs in addition to their mobile devices. Google notes that fully 75 percent of smartphone owners continue to use their computer to access the Internet daily. And in the US at least, PC usage among smartphone users actually went up in the past year.

Tablet usage, meanwhile, is still relatively small though it's clearly on the way up. The US has the highest rate of tablet usage in the world, though it's at just 11 percent of all consumers. And tablet usage is dwarfed by PC usage. In the US, 73 percent of smartphone-toting consumers also use a laptop or other portable computer, and 57 percent use a desktop PC. Only 17 percent of this audience uses a tablet. Similar usage ratios are present in all of the other surveyed countries, but I'm curious to see how this changes over time.

In the summary of the study, Ipsos notes that the mobile Internet is today's main driver of growth in time spent online, and that smartphones have had a significant impact on Internet usage worldwide. 

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Comments
  • Paul Thurrott
    4 months ago
    Jan 29, 2012

    Um. No.

    Netbooks *are* PCs, obviously. They tend to be cheaper, have Atom-style, lower-end processors, and smaller screens. But they are clearly PCs.

    Price has nothing to do with this differentiation between PCs and non-PCs. PCs have always come in a range of sizes, configurations, and price ranges.

  • Jago
    4 months ago
    Jan 26, 2012

    @Mustang17

    I agree, I'm an illustrator and there's no way I could (currently) do most of my work on an iPad (and even if I could I'd miss having two 27" screens..)

    But, I do think that we are the exception, probably everyone who's commented on this thread is the exception, people who follow tech news in general are probably the exception. I would have thought that the vast majority of people who currently have a PC would be able to swap it for an iPad and not notice what hey couldn't do.... and that the percentage of people for whom this is true is only going to increase with each iteration of the iPad.

    It also seems quite likely that a home that currently has a PC/Mac will not necessarily get rid of it in favour of an iPad but could well add multiple iPads to the household whilst retaining the "traditional" computer as an increasingly under used fall back...

    I guess this could mean that we dont see the full effect of the Post-PC era until these people who are adding iPads to their current PC/Mac setup get rid of the PC entirely and don't replace it...?

  • Mustang17
    4 months ago
    Jan 26, 2012

    @ RK_AB

    For us creative types, nothing matches the power,flexiblity, connectivity and of course comfort when using a PC.

    They are also wonderful at running lots of apps at the same time, opening and closing whatever is required.

  • JeffinLondon
    4 months ago
    Jan 26, 2012

    My personal observation is.... after a brief intense flirtation with the iPad tablet, it now sits gathering dust on my bookshelf. Hate the full screen, in and out of apps and no keyboard. Drives me mental.

    A desktop Windows 7 PC (bigger screen and better sound), laptop PC (need the keyboard) and Android phone + a Kindle for reading is my world. The iPad is useless really.



  • BananaJr
    4 months ago
    Jan 25, 2012

    All this report says is how people WERE using their devices. It's a point in time. It does not say how they WILL use them. I can tell you that we are in the early stages of decommissing 10's of thousands of laptop and desktop PC's at our company and replacing them with thin clients and tablets. On the backend we have virtualized the desktop or use Citrix XenApp to deliver a desktop using Windows 2008 server. What this means to the user is that you have a desktop that you can attach to from anywhere running just the way you left it from the last device. So now I can connect to that same desktop from older versions of Windows, thin clients not running Windows, Mac OS X, iPad etc. So now our environment reflects exactly the recent earnings calls from various companies. Less PC and WIndows 7 purchases, more server purchases and more non Windows tablets and thin clients. A business user at home can now buy whatever they want and connect to their work desktop remotely and securely. Windows 7 is now relegated to as you say when a PC is needed to do more, but that reason is declining rapidly to strict cases of engineering, video editing etc.

    Microsoft has a difficult challenge ahead of it on the client side and is reacting way to slowly to the changes that are taking place. I remember the day when I waited to see what Microsoft's plans were before designing solutions now I don't have to wait. Plenty of other companies are stepping up and providing solutions.

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