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Mobile Insider is a daily newsletter from BI Intelligence delivered first thing every morning exclusively to BI Intelligence subscribers. Sign up for a free trial of BI Intelligence today. DATA HOGS: iPhone 5S users eat up more data than anyone on other devices, according to a new study from mobile data analytics company Arieso. Currently, 5S users suck up almost seven times more data than iPhone 3G users. The iPhone 3G was used as a benchmark for comparison of data usage across a variety of the newest and most popular smartphones and tablets.
The 5S lead, benchmarked against the 3G, was greater than the data usage lead for any other smartphone or tablet product from a variety of manufacturers. When looking at emerging markets, that number jumps to 20 times more data than the average user. Arieso claims that each new iPhone generation has driven data consumption up between 20% and 40% from the previous year. This theory held true with the debut of the 5S as well; 5S data consumption is up 20% from last year's study, when the top-ranked phone was the preceding iPhone 5.
It's not just the 5S, either. Apple devices made up six of the top 10 spots in Arieso's data usage device rankings, again showing that iOS users do more on their phones than most other mobile users. But Arieso thinks all flagship phone users, including Samsung users, are contributing to the trend. The lower-cost companion to the 5S, the iPhone 5C, made up only about half the data consumption of its flagship counterpart.
Flagship phone users are even outperforming tablet users for data consumption. Because premium and flagship phones have become more like "phablets" with larger screens, consumers may now ultimately prefer wielding their more portable smartphone for most data consumption purposes. Whatever the device may be, the power users at the top are hungrier than ever for data. Looking at usage shares on 4G networks, Arieso calculated that the top 0.
1%, essentially the most extreme data users, consume about half of all 4G data. (Arieso) GOOGLE STILL OPEN-SOURCE?: We do not charge fees for our Android Mobile Services. A report from The Guardian claiming that Google-branded Android services like Maps, Gmail, and Google Play required smartphone manufacturers to obtain a "Google Mobile Services" (GMS) license to be paid for on a per-device basis.
The company quickly fired back, confirming to 9 To 5 Google that the report was not true. One of the inherent charms of Android is its free, open-source nature. But Google has been quickly attempting to corral its presence across the platform's many third-party app markets by making GMS closed. The company has already received undue attention for this strategy, and would likely be under more scrutiny for charging a GMS licensing fee, which goes directly against the open-source philosophy of Android.
(9 To 5 Google) SAMSUNG PROFIT SLOWS: Throughout 2013, Samsung has been chasing Apple in terms of profitability. Now, the final quarter might actually have widened that gap. The debut of new iPhones and the successful sales from other, lower-cost manufacturers put a damper on Samsung Galaxy unit sales, causing Samsung's overall profit to fall.
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