Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Unwired world: 5.3 billion mobile phone users by year end

Brought up in Vinnie Ferraro's class today at his first lecture during the winter session on Contemporary U.S. Foreign Policy(access to full syllabus and reading materials). I will write a separate entry on the first session of class. It is a must for his level of intelligence and knowledge on what is going with the U.S. as the world number one power in decline.

October 21, 2010, San Francisco: The world will have 5.3 billion mobile phone subscribers by the end of the year, the International Telecommunications Union has predicted in a new report, publicised at its annual conference in Guadalajara, Mexico.

The report said that mobile phone networks are already available to over 90 percent of the world's population. Mobile phone penetration in developed countries is 68 percent, a saturation level higher than any previous technology.

Internet access is also exploding, the report found. The number of internet users has doubled over the past five years and will reach 2 billion by the end of 2010. An estimated 1.6 billion people have home internet access, up from 1.4 billion people at the end of 2009.

But there's still a huge gulf between the first and third worlds.

By the end of 2010, 71 percent of the population in developed countries will be online by the end of the year, compared to 21 percent of the population in developing countries.

While in developed countries 65 percent of people have access to the Internet at home, this is the case for only 13.5 percent of people in developing countries where Internet access in schools, at work and public locations is critical.

Regional differences are significant: 65 percent of Europeans are on the Internet, compared to only 9.6 percent of Africans

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