Originally posted by TonyToro at 8-6-2013 18:07
So why are Android users so much less likely to use their device as anything more than a regular phone or a book reading device? ...
I think the second article actually goes a long way towards answering your question
From my own observation the picture is definitely skewed by iOS being used for so many games. Apple seems to be winning the entertainment business.
From further observation the sort of games I see android users playing are more likely to be offline games - like candy crush - rather than online games that result in online traffic. This will significantly skew the data by tracking the easily trackable online traffic and missing out on the offline phone use.
But I think it's important to question the premise "a smart phone is a better smart phone if the user spends more time using it". That reminds me of how websites used to log the amount of time spent by each visitor as their key metric ... but google set itself the goal of REDUCING average time spent on their site. Likewise I would see a good smartphone as being one that accomplishes more tasks, but does so requiring less time - and definitely fewer browser views, not more!
Comes down to what do you want to use it for
... and if a phone gives the user what they want, that's a good thing even if the user only wants a simple phone that can easily back up the contacts and occasionally read emails ...
... and if it does all that at a reasonable price, without gouging profits, so much the better.
My own view is that a "better" phone would be one that handles high-end tasks 'better' while also allowing making low-end tasks simpler and more intuitive, for those who want a phone that serves them rather than enslaves them. And from that perspective Apple's celebration of a metric that shows iOS users spending more time and more money on their phones seems a very dubious selling point!!
It looks a bit like they're grasping to find ways to present the data in a favourable light, and that makes me wonder why they don't spend their money and time talking about selling points that measure the actual utility users get from their devices?