Recent wireless subscribers articles
It used to be that if a mobile phone customer wanted to switch service providers, they had to give up their old phone number. And if one had a particularly “good” number or had the number for several years, the inability to retain that number was a huge disincentive to switch services. But several years ago, the ability to carry one’s number from carrier to carrier became a reality in the U.S., spurring greater competition among carriers. And with mobile number portability (MNP) being contemplated in India, some consumers there …
[read more]Australians are abandoning desktop PCs and flocking to laptops and other wireless devices, according to Nielsen Online’s Internet and Technology Report released today. In the last year, household ownership of desktop computers declined 10 percent, while ownership of laptops jumped from 49 percent to 63. Wireless LAN ownership increased more than 20 points in the last year and now stands at 53 percent. Additionally, broadband subscriptions reached 97 percent, up from 84 percent in 2007.
“As Australians become increasingly less wired in the ways they access the Internet, a greater focus …
The typical U.S. mobile subscriber sends and receives more SMS text messages than telephone calls, according to research released Monday by Nielsen Mobile.
During the second quarter of 2008, a typical U.S. mobile subscriber placed or received 204 phone calls each month. In comparison, the average mobile customer sent or received 357 text messages per month — a 450% increase over the number of text messages circulated monthly during the same period in 2006.





