News about <![CDATA[research]]> News about en-us <![CDATA[Study: 59% of Men, 36% of Women Admit to Having a One-Night Stand]]> <![CDATA[IDC: Android OEMs Shipped 162M Smartphones In Q1, More Than 4X Apple's Rate; Windows Phone Now In (Distant) Third]]> IDC today was the latest to publish its numbers on smartphone market shares after the major handset makers released Q1 earnings, and like Gartner, Strategy Analytics and the rest, it underscores the power of Google's Android platform at the moment: Android OEMs shipped 162.1 million handsets in the quarter, giving the platform a 75% share of total worldwide shipments, while Apple's 37.4 million devices put it at an increasingly distant second position at 17.3%. Microsoft's Windows Phone, driven primarily by its partner Nokia (79% of all WP shipments), grew the most of all platforms, with a rise of 133.3%, but that still puts it at a single-digit share, 3.2% on 7 million devices shipped. ]]> <![CDATA[Nearly 75% Of All Smartphones Sold In Q1 Were Android, With Samsung At 30%; Mobile Sales Overall Nearly Flat: Gartner]]> Gartner has just released its Q1 figures for mobile handset sales, and the key takeaway is that Android continues to steal the show, led by handset maker Samsung. Google's mobile platform now accounts for nearly 75% of all handset sales, a jump of almost 20 percentage points on a year ago, and equating to 156 million devices sold in the three-month period. Smartphones sales grew by 63 million units to 210 million for the quarter, making up nearly half of all mobile phone sales overall, at 425 million. With the number of mobile handset sales up by a mere 0.7% on a year ago, it's clear that higher-end devices are very the much growth engine for the mobile industry at the moment. ]]> <![CDATA[Why focusing on ‘time spent’ with print misses the point about how the news works now]]>
    


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<![CDATA[Why focusing on ‘time spent’ with print misses the point about how the news works now]]>
    


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<![CDATA[Research Drives America]]> <![CDATA[Study: Single Men 33% More Likely than Women to Believe in "Love at First Sight"]]> <![CDATA[Studying Affects of Weather and Climatic on Cattle]]> Continue reading ]]> <![CDATA[Rutgers, Auburn & Purdue Universities Energy Efficiency Project Funded by II-VI Foundation]]> <![CDATA[Shopping Around For Cheap Prices [Not Mobile Payments] Is The Most Popular In-Store Activity Among Mobile Users, Says Google]]> Most people may not yet be using smartphones to pay for goods when they are out shopping, but that doesn't mean that they are not glued to their handsets anyway. Some research out today from Google indicates that among smartphone owners, some 79% can be classified as "mobile shoppers," using their devices for some aspect of the shopping experience, from finding store locations through to finding goods. On top of that, among those who use smartphones for any kind of shopping or browsing, some 84% do so in physical stores. And when it comes to investing in experiences that consumers like, retailers should stick to mobile web sites: 65% of consumers prefer these to apps. ]]> <![CDATA[Are African Nations Vunerable to Instability as the Planets Cycle through the Constellations?]]> <![CDATA[GroundCntrl Launches On Demand SaaS Mobile Solution for Field Task Management]]> <![CDATA[CBSR EVENT: Sustainable Consumption - The Rise of the Aspirational Consumer]]> <![CDATA[Targeted Screening For C. difficile Upon Hospital Admission Could Potentially Identify Most Colonized Patients]]> <![CDATA[Mission Aligned Exits - What's Your Method?]]> <![CDATA[Android Picks Up The Pace In Smartphone Sales Over iOS Globally, While Windows Phone Continues With Modest Gains, Says Kantar]]> Google's mobile OS Android continues to power ahead as the world's most popular smartphone platform, according to figures out today from Kantar Worldpanel Comtech, the WPP-owned market research company that tracks sales of handsets across key markets on a 12-week rolling cycle. In the nine markets surveyed by Kantar -- Australia, China, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, UK and the U.S., all detailed in the table below -- the only one where Android did not dominate was Japan, where Apple's iOS just about eked out a lead against it (49.2% versus 45.8% of sales) for the three months ending March 31. Elsewhere, the figures indicate that regardless of whether the market is developed (U.S., UK, Germany) or emerging (China) or struggling financially (Spain), collectively, Android handset makers are winning them all, with sales figures for the platform reaching their high point in Spain, at 93.5% of all smartphone sales. ]]> <![CDATA[More R&D from BASF Acquiring Becker Underwood]]> Continue reading ]]> <![CDATA[How to Lose $200 Billion in 2 Minutes]]> <![CDATA[As Smartphones Reach A Global Tipping Point, Leader Samsung Shipped 71M Devices In Q1, Nearly 2X As Many As Apple]]> IDC is the first of the big analyst companies to come out with quarterly mobile device shipment numbers that indicate Q1 as the first quarter where smartphones have outnumbered more basic feature phones in worldwide shipments: in a total market of 418.6 million devices, 216.2 (51.6%) were smartphones. But it is was a kind of tipping point of another sort, too: it is a sign of how Apple is not the juggernaut that it once was. ]]> <![CDATA[MelStevia Inc. invites Dr. Joseph RESNICK & Dr. Ronald STEWART on our Science Advisory Team]]> <![CDATA[Forget touchscreens: paint a computer interface anywhere with WorldKit]]>
    
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<![CDATA[Dismal Science]]> <![CDATA[Hudson Robotics Announces Dramatic Advance in Drug Discovery Technology]]> <![CDATA[With Smartphones, Consumers Think Brand And Price First, Carriers Second, Finds Compete/Google Research]]> The growth in smartphone usage -- supported by ever-faster mobile network speeds -- is also giving rise to a much more competitive landscape among carriers, handset makers and other phone retailers targeting consumers on the hunt for new devices. Google today is releasing a report it compiled in partnership with Compete to show how that is playing out in one market in particular, the U.S. It shows that while carriers may still hold the key to making a call or getting online with a smartphone, when it comes to buying one they are taking a backseat as users seek out brands and best prices first, with carriers as the follow-up to that. ]]> <![CDATA[Offering Large Selection of Wine Brands Boosts Sales at Restaurants and Especially at Bars]]> <![CDATA[Stanford team shows how doctors’ notes can spot problem drugs]]>
    


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<![CDATA[Henry Blodget says Business Insider is growing, but it’s still losing money]]>
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<![CDATA[Global IT Spend Will Rise 4.1% To $3.8 Trillion In 2013, ‘A Calm Ocean With Turbulent Currents', With Mobile Driving Growth]]> Gartner has just released its annual projections on worldwide IT spend over the next two years -- arguably the analyst house's most wide-ranging report covering sales in hardware, software, enterprise and telecoms. The overall trends continue to point up: globally we will see $3.8 trillion spent across all categories, a rise of 4.1% on 2012. That's a sign of slight recovery on a year ago: growth in 2012 was only 2.1%. Mobile and enterprise services are fuelling a lot of the good news, with declines in areas of legacy technology like PCs and voice services. Gartner further notes that the same trends will largely continue into 2014. ]]> <![CDATA[NFL, General Electric Ally to Fund Concussion Research]]> <![CDATA[LONG CAPITALISM]]>

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