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Internet access limited in developing world: Facebook
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Feb 24, 2015


Android dominant in two-horse smartphone race: IDC
Washington (AFP) Feb 24, 2015 - Google Android dominated the global smartphone market in 2014, holding an 81.5 percent market share, with Apple's iOS second and no strong third player, market tracker IDC said Tuesday.

Despite Apple's late surge on its newly released iPhones, the California giant saw its market share for the year drop slightly to 14.8 percent. The fourth quarter was better for Apple as it claimed 19.7 percent, IDC data showed.

With Android and iOS holding some 96 percent of the market, there has been little progress from alternative platforms, with Windows Phone losing momentum and BlackBerry nearly disappearing, IDC said.

"Instead of a battle for the third ecosystem after Android and iOS, 2014 instead yielded skirmishes, with Windows Phone edging out BlackBerry, Firefox, Sailfish and the rest, but without any of these platforms making the kind of gains needed to challenge the top two," said Melissa Chau, an IDC analyst.

"This isn't to say that vendors aren't making moves, especially for the growth segments -- the low-end markets. With Microsoft bringing ever-cheaper Lumia into play and Tizen finally getting launched to India early this year, there is still a hunger to chip away at Android's dominance."

IDC said Android phone makers sold over one billion handsets of the 1.3 billion delivered globally, with Apple selling 192 million.

Windows phone saw its market share slip to 2.7 percent in 2014 from 3.3 percent a year earlier. And BlackBerry managed just 0.4 percent, sliding from 1.9 percent in 2013.

Most people in the developing world do not use the Internet, with access limited by high costs, poor availability and a lack of relevant content, a Facebook report said Tuesday.

Facebook, which carried out the study through its Internet.org initiative that aims to boost connectivity around the world, said the rate of growth on the Internet is slowing.

"By early 2015, three billion people will be online. This is an incredible milestone, but it also means that only 40 percent of the world's population has ever connected to the Internet," the report said.

In the developed world, some 76 percent of the population is online, but the figure is just 29.8 percent in developing nations, according to the research.

The rate of growth of Internet users was just 6.6 percent in 2014, the fourth year of deceleration.

"At present rates of decelerating growth, the internet won't reach four billion people until 2019," the report said.

The report said tech companies, governments and non-government organizations need to do more to boost the number of people online.

The report said the three main factors which keep people offline were lack of infrastructure, affordability and the lack of relevant content for people in their languages.

"People aren't using the Internet because they're not aware of the Internet, there is insufficient content available in their primary language, or they can't read or understand content that is," the study found.

"To provide relevant content to 80 percent of the world would require sufficient content in at least 92 languages."

The report said Wikipedia, for example, is available in just 52 languages.

The report found some regions especially lacking in Internet use: only 16.9 percent of people were online in sub-Saharan Africa and 13.7 percent in South Asia.

Facebook found that mobile -- or getting access to the Internet by connected phones -- was a key factor in many parts of the world.

The Facebook report said the Internet "increases opportunities for everyone" and its expansion it "will exert a powerful effect on the global economy, particularly in the developing world."

"A more connected world is a world of more opportunity, freer expression, and greater innovation," the report said.

Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg was to discuss the findings next week in a speech at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.

rl/rcw

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