Dogs on Skateboards, on Your Phone: YouTube Dominates Mobile Streaming
Mobile phones are computers you can carry in your pocket.
So no surprise you spend lots of time using them to do the same thing you do on a regular computer: Watch YouTube.
Here, via broadband service company Sandvine, is a breakdown of mobile Web traffic in North America. By Sandvine’s count, Google’s video site accounts for nearly a third of the data piped into your phone from wireless networks.
Bear in mind that Sandvine is tracking data usage, not time spent, so this isn’t an exact mirror of your phone habits. But it is revealing. Also interesting: We spend more data pushing updates, photos, etc., to Facebook than any place else.
If anything, Sandvine’s data likely undercounts the amount of use these sites get from your phone, because a lot of your phone’s use, particularly for stuff like streaming video, is probably happening at home, on a Wi-Fi network.
But it certainly syncs up nicely with the emphasis YouTube has put on overhauling its mobile apps — the company says it gets a billion mobile views a day — and why it was important for the company to reclaim its app on Apple’s iOS devices.