Chapter 1: Who Are Smartphone Users?
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5860/ltr.48n1Abstract
The demographics of mobile Internet users run partly counter to stereotype, with blacks and Hispanics more likely than whites both to own cell phones and to use a wide range of their data features. However, minorities, the young, and people with low income and education are more likely to access the Internet only from their phones. This differs from the desktop Internet experience in ways that have implications for library values.
References
Aaron Smith, Mobile Access 2010 (Washington, DC: Pew Internet & American Life Project 2010) .n '“comScore Reports July 2011 U.S. Mobile Subscriber Market Share,”' () news release, Aug. 30, 2011, n '“comScore Reports June 2011 U.S. Mobile Subscriber Market Share,”' () news release, Aug. 4, 2011, nSmith, Mobile Access nIbid.nAaron Smith, Smartphone Adoption and Usage (Washington, DC: Pew Internet & American Life Project 2011) .nSmith, Mobile Access : 10-nAndrew Carnegie, '“The Best Fields for Philanthropy,”' The North American Review 149 no. 397 (Dec. 1889): 689 available online at www.jstor.org/stable/25101907n