Source: http://egovau.blogspot.com/2012/03/australia-goes-mobile-47-of-net.html
It's long been reported that the majority of internet connections in Japan are via mobile devices - since 2006 in fact.
It now seems Australia is on the verge of following the same path, with the ABS reporting that as at 31 December 2011, 47% of internet connections in Australia were via mobile devices.
The report, (8153.0 - Internet Activity, Australia, Dec 2011), has some other interesting findings as well...
- The number of internet connections grew by 11.0% in the year to 31 December, and by 6.3% since the end of June 2011.
- Mobile wireless grew fastest, with a 14.7% increase since the end of June 2011.
- The number of dial-up connections continued to decline, to 475,000 - still a substantial number, but representing only 4% of the total 11,596,000 internet connections in Australia. Of those 379,000 (3.2%) were households, the rest businesses.
- The number of dial-up connections declined 17.9% (from 579,000 to 475,000) since June 2011.
Note the ABS state the decline was 16.7% - I don't know why our calculated figures differ.
- More Australians remain on connection speeds less than 8Mbps (55%), however a good proportion are on 8-24Mbps (34.3%). Only 0.3% are on connections greater than 100Mbps.
- The total data downloaded was 345,518 Terabytes (or 345,518,000 Gigiabytes) for the three months ending 31 December 2011. This was an increase of 26% since June 2011 (remember the number of connections only grew by 6.3% so we're all downloading more).
- The average downloaded per connection was 29.8 Gigabytes (Gb) for the three months so, on average, we download 10Gb per month.
- However dial-up users only downloaded, on average, 67 Megabytes (Mb) of data per month, while broadband users downloaded an average of 10.3 Gb of data - showing a massive difference in usage.
- There were 91 ISPs in Australia with more than 1,000 subscribers - remaining a competitively very robust market.
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