According to the latest data from Forrester Research, in the United States, Generation Y is the leading age group behind purchases of the Apple iPhone. Forrester
says that 29% of this generation uses Apple iPhone as their main
handset. Samsung handsets rank second, with 20% of the Generation Y
people choosing them. This is the most technologically aware generation -
72% of them own a smartphone and 25% have a tablet; nearly all in the
group send SMS messages and 70% of them use their smartphone to check
the news, read email, grab sports scores and visit social networking
sites. Gen Z is the next largest group buying the Apple iPhone at 24%
followed by the 22% in Gen Z.
Overall in the U.S., Korean based Samsung has a leading 24% of the U.S. Smartphone market
followed by Apple with 18% and, quite shockingly, LG also with 18%. The
difference is that while Apple attracts younger buyers, an amazing 22%
of Golden Generation responders, aged 65 and up, said they have an LG
smartphone (versus 6% for Apple and 27% for Samsung in the category).
Would you be proud to see granny sportin' an LG Optimus G?
Motorola is fourth with 12% of the U.S.smartphone market and was, along with Samsung, the most consistent performer across the time-line. The Motorola DROID RAZR series has a model with a 3300mAh battery and even the non-MAXX Motorola DROID RAZR HD offers a 2530mAh battery that should last at least a whole day. Motorola makes its phones like tanks, which help attract the older users who are more prone to drop their handset on the floor. HTC rounds out the top 5 with 8% of the U.S.smartphone market. BlackBerry and Nokia and tied for sixth place with each owning 5% each.
source: ForresterResearch, ReadWrite via TUAW
Motorola is fourth with 12% of the U.S.smartphone market and was, along with Samsung, the most consistent performer across the time-line. The Motorola DROID RAZR series has a model with a 3300mAh battery and even the non-MAXX Motorola DROID RAZR HD offers a 2530mAh battery that should last at least a whole day. Motorola makes its phones like tanks, which help attract the older users who are more prone to drop their handset on the floor. HTC rounds out the top 5 with 8% of the U.S.smartphone market. BlackBerry and Nokia and tied for sixth place with each owning 5% each.
source: ForresterResearch, ReadWrite via TUAW
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