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Apple Tops Holiday Sales With 44 Percent of All New Device Activations (macrumors.com) 188

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Mac Rumors: Apple's iPhone and iPad were the most popular mobile devices gifted during the holidays this year, according to new data shared by Yahoo-owned mobile analytics firm Flurry. Flurry examined device activations by manufacturer between 12/19 and 12/25, finding Apple devices to be twice as popular as Samsung devices. 44 percent of all new phone activations were Apple iPhones, while Samsung smartphones accounted for 21 percent of activations. Huawei, LG, Amazon, Oppo, Xiaomi, and Motorola trailed behind with between two and three percent of activations each. Google's Pixel smartphone, which came out in October, did not make Flurry's list. Last year, Flurry released a similar report, and Apple devices made up 49.1 percent of all device activations, while Samsung devices came in at 19.8 percent. Phablets, or smartphones and tablets ranging in size from 5 inches to 6.9 inches, continued to grow in popularity. In 2016, the phablets category, which includes the 5.5-inch iPhone 6 Plus, 6s Plus, and 7 Plus, was responsible for 37 percent of total device activations. Medium-sized phones, like the 4.7-inch iPhone 6, iPhone 6s, and iPhone 7, were responsible for 45 percent of all activations. Activations of full-sized tablets, like the iPad, have continued to wane. From Flurry's report: "While Samsung is slowly growing in popularity throughout the holiday season, up 1% from last year, Apple devices continue to be the gift to give. Holding the third and fourth positions for activations are Huawei and LG; which is remarkable, as both manufacturers do not have an individual device within the top 35 devices activated. Their high rank is likely due to the fact that they have wide variety of devices and affordable options (hundreds of phablet and medium phones) for consumers to choose from."
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Apple Tops Holiday Sales With 44 Percent of All New Device Activations

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  • In other words (Score:5, Insightful)

    by lucm ( 889690 ) on Tuesday December 27, 2016 @09:32PM (#53563733)

    The majority of new device activations (roughly 56%) was Android phones.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by grub ( 11606 )
      Apple takes home the lion's share of all mobile profits by a huge margin. Cheap Android phones don't make much money for anyone and they're the bulk of what is sold.
      • by lucm ( 889690 )

        Apple takes home the lion's share of all mobile profits by a huge margin.

        And you consider this a good thing? Bragging material? When everyone knows that they stopped innovating years ago, that they're exploiting Chinese workers and that they're piling up billions upon billions of dollars in offshore bank accounts, severely hurting the American economy in the process?

        Meanwhile Apple customers are probably the first to get their panties in a bunch over Walmart business practices and their impact on the American factories. Such a bunch of hypocrites.

        • by grub ( 11606 )
          Businesses only stay in business when they make profit. So, yes, that is a good thing for their business.

          I don't go to Walmart, but I'm also not in the US, so its impact on American factories means little to me.
          • by lucm ( 889690 )

            Businesses only stay in business when they make profit.

            Businesses stay in business when their business model is sustainable. That's why Apple took a nosedive in the 90s and had to be saved by Microsoft, and that's why they're again heading straight for the wall. They don't learn.

            • by grub ( 11606 )
              So when Apple's business model is sustainable (profitable), it's bad? What wall are they headed towards? It sounds like this story is more good news for Apple.
              • by lucm ( 889690 )

                So when Apple's business model is sustainable (profitable), it's bad?

                Profitable and sustainable are two different things. For instance, one can operate a very profitable business as a bank robber or Ponzi scheme instigator but this is not sustainable.

                Fucking your customers over consistently by forcing them to upgrade power cables or headphones on top of selling them antiquated hardware at a premium compared to the vastly superior hardware sold by the competition is not a sustainable business model.

                • So to you Apple was in a better shape when they were still losing money. Well thanks for that insight.
                  • by lucm ( 889690 )

                    So to you Apple was in a better shape when they were still losing money. Well thanks for that insight.

                    Look pal, you can twist words all day long, it won't stop Apple from continuing their freefall into irrelevance.

        • You're just angry that he/she gets to pay 4 times as much as you for their phone. Jealous much?
        • Yeah, this I always find hilarious too - people being *happy* that 2/3 of the cost of their phone is pure profit for the badge mannufacturer.

      • Cheap Android phones don't make much money for anyone.

        Rubbish. Well over a billion Android handsets per year drives a huge industrial supply chain, making billions for everyone from suppliers of raw materials to foundries to manufacturers to retailers. Oracle says the Android industry generates $32 billion annually [bloomberg.com]. I say that's an underestimate, and I say enough wishful thinking from bitter Apple groupies.

        • Cheap Android phones don't make much money for anyone.

          Rubbish. Well over a billion Android handsets per year drives a huge industrial supply chain, making billions for everyone from suppliers of raw materials to foundries to manufacturers to retailers. Oracle says the Android industry generates $32 billion annually [bloomberg.com]. I say that's an underestimate, and I say enough wishful thinking from bitter Apple groupies.

          That's Google's total revenue on Android until Jan. 2016. What's that number supposed to prove exactly in relation to the question asked? Again, this is neither profit (as in "making money") nor "the industry".

          Just to make sure you understand: Apple had more revenue on iOS last quarter.

          • Oracle says the Android industry generates $32 billion annually [bloomberg.com]. I say that's an underestimate, and I say enough wishful thinking from bitter Apple groupies.

            That's Google's total revenue on Android until Jan. 2016. What's that number supposed to prove exactly in relation to the question asked?

            You are right, that number is a small fraction of the total Android industry, what was I thinking?

            Again, this is neither profit (as in "making money") nor "the industry". Just to make sure you understand: Apple had more revenue on iOS last quarter.

            You don't mean "on iOS", you mean from all its operations. Six times as many Android phones are sold as Apple phones, and for more than 1/6th the price. Inescapable conclusion: worldwide Android revenue is considerably more than Apple's revenue. Sure, it's divided up between many companies, and we care about that exactly why? Then there's the trend: Apple volume down ~7%/year while the world phone market increa

            • Oracle says the Android industry generates $32 billion annually [bloomberg.com]. I say that's an underestimate, and I say enough wishful thinking from bitter Apple groupies.

              That's Google's total revenue on Android until Jan. 2016. What's that number supposed to prove exactly in relation to the question asked?

              You are right, that number is a small fraction of the total Android industry, what was I thinking?

              Not much, you just grabbed the first number that you "thought" supported your point and posted it without checking the facts. Which is your MO.

              Again, this is neither profit (as in "making money") nor "the industry". Just to make sure you understand: Apple had more revenue on iOS last quarter.

              You don't mean "on iOS", you mean from all its operations.

              Nope, I meant from iOS. Check it out, you imbecile. Problem is you can't, because you are too stupid. Tough Love, indeed. Certainly not Loves Thought.

    • What percentage were Windows phones? If it was anything more than 12%, then Android would not be 56%. On a different note, tablet activations would decline, since a lot of the apps that work on phones are disabled on tablets - particularly on the Android side of things
      • a lot of the apps that work on phones are disabled on tablets - particularly on the Android side of things

        Examples? I'm not saying that's not true, but I haven't encountered it; just a bit curious.

        • I have. There were some apps that I wanted to install and run, such as Android Auto, so that I could try connecting it to my car's navigation. It listed my device as incompatible, while the app states that it's designed for phones. There are some others I've tried before where I've run into this - can't recall of the top of my head.
    • Most likely accounting for 1% of profits...
  • But, but... headphone jacks?!?
  • by Tough Love ( 215404 ) on Tuesday December 27, 2016 @09:50PM (#53563805)

    Fixed the headline.

  • Funny (Score:4, Informative)

    by Trogre ( 513942 ) on Tuesday December 27, 2016 @09:58PM (#53563827) Homepage

    I don't recall activating my new Android tablet, whatever that means.

    Where do I sign up?

    • They're probably talking about tablets w/ cellular capabilities that can be added to the carrier's network. You could buy a cellular iPad or Galaxy tab at a Best Buys, Costco or any such store, and get it activated while you're there

    • I don't recall activating my new Android tablet, whatever that means.

      Where do I sign up?

      You install an app that uses Flurry Analytics. Done.

      • I don't recall activating my new Android tablet, whatever that means.

        Where do I sign up?

        You install an app that uses Flurry Analytics. Done.

        Flurry isn't an ideal sampler though - it's much more used in iOS than Android apps, and seems to be persistently under-counting Android because of that.

  • Phablets, or smartphones and tablets ranging in size from 5 inches to 6.9 inches, continued to grow in popularity.

    Need to adjust that definition. 90% of Android phones now have screen of 5" or larger. It seems it's only once you hit 5.7" or above people really start throwing around the term "phablet" now.

    • Phablets, or smartphones and tablets ranging in size from 5 inches to 6.9 inches, continued to grow in popularity.

      Need to adjust that definition. 90% of Android phones now have screen of 5" or larger. It seems it's only once you hit 5.7" or above people really start throwing around the term "phablet" now.

      Where did you get that idea? According to Google's own statistics, 90% of all screens are "small" or "normal" with "normal" ending somewhere below 5" on their vague "definition" chart. https://developer.android.com/about/dashboards/index.html [android.com] . https://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html#range [android.com]

      • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

        Where did you get that idea? According to Google's own statistics, 90% of all screens are "small" or "normal" with "normal" ending somewhere below 5" on their vague "definition" chart. https://developer.android.com/about/dashboards/index.html [android.com] . https://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html#range [android.com]

        The documents you are citing appear to date back to Android 3.2 and are obviously out of date in regards to current handset specs. Average screen densities and diagonal measurements have grown quite a bit the last few years as manufactures try to one-up each other on numbers for marketing purposes.

        Go on PhoneArena.com or GSMArena.com and do a search of Android handsets and sizes. As someone who has just recently bought I new phone, I can tell you from first-hand experience that the vast majority of Android

    • I have seen people talk on them, holding them like phones next to their ears. Which looks weird
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 27, 2016 @10:17PM (#53563891)

    We had three iPhone 4S units in the family. All of them started to exhibit battery issues about a month ago. One had a dangerously swollen battery (which, according to Apple, is apparently "normal"). The other two refused to hold a charge. All three devices were happily running iOS 7.1.2.

    We took them into the service centre, and had the batteries replaced for ~$100/pop. They were good solid phones, and in stellar condition for their age, so why should we upgrade?

    Apparently Apple thought otherwise. I wasn't told this beforehand, but apparently "standard procedure" is to upgrade the software on the device prior to installing a new battery. Something about diagnostics- the tech basically said it was bullshit, the diagnostics from the older iOS software was identical to the new diagnostics, except for the version number- which Apple refuses to accept, and therefore will not ship the service centre a replacement battery.

    So we got all three devices back with new batteries... running iOS 9.

    Now they're virtually fucking useless.

    It takes a good 10-20 seconds to open the phone app. I can have exactly one tab open in Safari, switching to any other tab causes that page to reload (which is great for my 3G data plan). Switching to another application causes the new application to re-launch itself (presumably because it got terminated in the background). Switching back to Safari will cause Safari to reload the active page. Before, I used to be able to have 3-4 apps open at the same time (without having them get terminated by the OS) and 4-5 tabs in Safari no problem.

    Likewise, the new OS seems glitchy as fuck. Mail used to work fine with all my business IMAP accounts, now it's a crap shoot if half my inbox even loads (and it's a coin toss as to which half shows up). Even iCloud is a mess, some things are getting synced, others aren't. Almost nothing is working 100%. I've tried doing factory resets and setting up the phone from scratch, but it never makes any difference.

    We've purchased exactly one replacement phone (an iPhone 7). The shit show that came with that (had to upgrade iTunes, except the new version of iTunes required us to upgrade the OS as well, which broke a whole bunch of other stuff)... I don't know.

    We've still got a week to return that phone, and I honestly think we're going to do that and just switch to Android.

    I'm tired of Apple's shit. It's pretty clear that a large part of their business comes from planned obsolescence and forcing people to upgrade, rather then producing products that people actually want to go out and buy. And I've had enough. They can ram their activation and adoption numbers up their ass for all I care.

    • I've never used an iPhone for business, and neither do I use it for the bulk of my work. My main use of it is doing video calls using either FaceTime or WhatsApp. For my work, since my employer uses Google to host their email, I simply use my Android phone - a Moto X. From there, I use Hangouts, Mail and the other applications, as well as 8x8's VOIP package

      That's for this scenario. Had my employer used an MS Exchange server, I'd have gone w/ a Lumia. In fact, if a business licenses Office 365, they'd

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      You're on Slashdot, so assuming you can use a screwdriver, you can replace the battery in an Apple phone in about ten minutes, for about $20. Batteries on Amazon, or lots of other online retailers. They even come with screwdrivers for the annoying security screws.

      It's impressive that your batteries lasted 5+ years.

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      This 4S, with iOS v9.3.5, still works even though and unsupported. Its battery hasn't blown up, but its life has shrunk. Pokemon Go + Cellular can drain it in 30 minutes. :( I doubt I will replace its battery since it is old and slow since I got it for free from my king ant who didn't want it anymore.

    • Yeah - this is exactly my worry about the enforced OS upgrades. It's all well-and-good having your device upgraded to the latest version, but if that version is next to unusable then what have you really gained?

      I'm hardly saying that the Android situation is great, but one side-effect is that old devices don't get upgraded into obsolescence, and Android app developers don't assume that everyone's running on the latest OS like iOS developers do so you can usually still use the apps you want.

    • TL;DR you got five years out of a device that's build for 2-3, and it still works even though it's 5 generations obsolete. It does suck that they forcibly upgraded you past the 2.5 year old version with unpatched security vulnerabilities that you'd been enjoying, but pick yer poison.
  • AirPods: The gift that requires you to keep on giving.

  • Isn't that a frozen dessert sold at McDonalds?

  • "Apple's iPhone and iPad were the most popular mobile devices gifted during the holidays this year."

    They could have been purchased for the end-of-year tax write off.
  • Would be Apple versus "Android"...since there are basically TWO OS's, Apple and Android. Now, given that, it would show more android devices sold, than apple.
  • Loyal Apple fan for years but this year I just finally gave up. I was due for a laptop upgrade but was holding out for > 16G. That didn't happen and there is no way I'll be going to the new MBP. Saved > 2k there.

    Then I was going to get the Apple TV but it doesn't play nicely with my Harmony hub so I decided to do an Amazon Fire TV. It's impressive, 4k, runs Plex and everything I need, I can still AirPlay (granted I needed to buy an app for that but I can live with that) and it's 1/2 the pri

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