Newcomers to the mobile-phone market are heavy more wireless Web access at the expense of the phone makers that have been around for a while, according to a new report from AdMob. AdMob serves ads to 9,000 mobile Web sites and 3,000 applications. It tallies the types of phones that are querying those sites and releases periodic reports on its findings.
In August, AdMob found that 40 percent of queries came from iPhones, up from 33 percent six months ago. Android users hitting AdMob sites grew to 7 percent of users, up from 2 percent in February. The Palm Pre -- which only just launched in June -- had 4 percent of traffic in August.
Users of Nokia's Symbian phones who hit AdMob's ads dropped from 43 percent in February to 34 percent last month. BlackBerry users fell from driving 10 percent of traffic six months ago to 8 percent in August. Windows Mobile phones went from generating 7 percent of hits to AdMob sites in February to 4 percent in August.
AdMob also ranks handset models by the level of traffic they produce. Even though Nokia is slipping in terms of volume of traffic, it has 12 of the top 20 phones that hit AdMob's network. The iPhone has the number-one spot, followed by the first Android phone and the Nokia N70. No Windows Mobile phones appear in the top 20 and three BlackBerry devices made it to the list.
While many of the more established phone makers have tried to encourage mobile Internet usage, many end-users complained that poor browsers and hardware prevented them from spending much time online. Users of the iPhone, with its easy-to-use browser and large screen, quickly became the heaviest mobile Internet users on the market. While Android and Palm have followed some of the trends set by the iPhone, other phone and operating-system developers that have been around for some time do not appear to have caught up.
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