BARCELONA — After reaching around 4.6 billion mobile cellular subscriptions by the end of 2009, ITU expects the number of mobile cellular subscriptions globally to reach five billion in 2010, driven by advanced services and handsets in developed countries and increased take-up of mobile health services and mobile banking in the developing world. ‘Even during an economic crisis, we have seen no drop in the demand for communications services,’ says ITU Secretary-General Dr Hamadoun Touré, taking part in the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona this week, ‘and I am confident that we will continue to see a rapid uptake in mobile cellular services in particular in 2010, with many more people using their phones to access the internet.’ ITU expects to see the number of mobile broadband subscriptions exceed one billion globally during 2010, having topped 600 million by the end of 2009. With current growth rates, web access by people on the move – via laptops and smart mobile devices – is likely to exceed web access from desktop computers within the next five years. ‘Even the simplest, low-end mobile phone can do so much to improve healthcare in the developing world,’ adds Dr Touré. ‘Good […]
Tuesday, February 16th, 2010
ITU See 5 Billion Mobile Subscriptions Globally In 2010
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Source: International Telecommunications Union
Publication Date: 15-Feb-10
Link: ITU See 5 Billion Mobile Subscriptions Globally In 2010
Source: International Telecommunications Union
Publication Date: 15-Feb-10
Link: ITU See 5 Billion Mobile Subscriptions Globally In 2010
Stephan: Just a little over 20 years ago cell phones were rare, and the size of a shoulder bag. Thirty years ago they were only in cars, and cost $1 a minute to use. This has been an extraordinary historically significant cultural transformation in less than a single generation. Phones are cheaper than computers so this trend is also deeply global, in a way computers are not yet.