Messaging apps were the hottest, jumping in use by more than 200 percent. January 13, 2014 8:49 AM PST (Credit: Flurry) Overall use of mobile apps soared by 113 percent in 2013, according to a new report from analytics firm Flurry. Every category tracked by Flurry grew in use over the past year. Utilities and productivity apps rose by 149 percent, music and entertainment apps by 78 percent, and games by 66 percent. But the biggest leap was achieved by messaging and social apps, which climbed by 203 percent. Trying to explain the growth of social apps, Flurry cited the buzz over such programs as SnapChat, Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, WeChat, KakaoTalk, and Line. As one example of the power of social networks, Chinese phone maker Xiaomi launched a new smartphone to WeChat users last year, triggering sales of 150,000 smartphones in just under ten minutes. Xiaomi vice president Hugo Barra recently portrayed China's mobile market to CNET as fast-moving and dominated by Chinese-native apps like Weibo, QQ, Alipay, and WeChat. "Every person I know is on WeChat," Barra said. "We don't use phone, instant messaging, or text messaging," he said. "It's refreshing when your entire social life is on one platform." The capper to last year? On December 31st, 2013 at 11:59 pm, Flurry tracked 4.7 billion app sessions, a one-day record. And for the entire year, the firm saw a total of 1.126 trillion sessions. Available for iOS, Android, Windows Phone, BlackBerry, and other mobile platforms, Flurry's analytics service is used by 125,000 companies to measure their mobile app use, according to Flurry. The service reaches around 1.2 billion devices per month and records on average 3.5 billion app sessions per day, as described on Flurry's Web site.

Posted by : Unknown Monday, January 13, 2014

Messaging apps were the hottest, jumping in use by more than 200 percent.



January 13, 2014 8:49 AM PST



(Credit: Flurry)


Overall use of mobile apps soared by 113 percent in 2013, according to a new report from analytics firm Flurry.


Every category tracked by Flurry grew in use over the past year. Utilities and productivity apps rose by 149 percent, music and entertainment apps by 78 percent, and games by 66 percent. But the biggest leap was achieved by messaging and social apps, which climbed by 203 percent.


Trying to explain the growth of social apps, Flurry cited the buzz over such programs as SnapChat, Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, WeChat, KakaoTalk, and Line. As one example of the power of social networks, Chinese phone maker Xiaomi launched a new smartphone to WeChat users last year, triggering sales of 150,000 smartphones in just under ten minutes.


Xiaomi vice president Hugo Barra recently portrayed China's mobile market to CNET as fast-moving and dominated by Chinese-native apps like Weibo, QQ, Alipay, and WeChat.


"Every person I know is on WeChat," Barra said. "We don't use phone, instant messaging, or text messaging," he said. "It's refreshing when your entire social life is on one platform."


The capper to last year? On December 31st, 2013 at 11:59 pm, Flurry tracked 4.7 billion app sessions, a one-day record. And for the entire year, the firm saw a total of 1.126 trillion sessions.


Available for iOS, Android, Windows Phone, BlackBerry, and other mobile platforms, Flurry's analytics service is used by 125,000 companies to measure their mobile app use, according to Flurry. The service reaches around 1.2 billion devices per month and records on average 3.5 billion app sessions per day, as described on Flurry's Web site.



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