Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Rank Country/Region Total population Smartphone users Smartphone penetration 1 PRC 1440M 865.04M 59.9% 2 India 1390M 606.57M 43.5% 3 United States 332.92M 240.15M
Rank Country/Territory Penetration 1 South Korea 97.49% 2 Japan 94.70% 3 Norway 92.16% 4 Hong Kong 90.34% 5 United States 90.32% 6 Netherlands 89.64% 7 Hungary 89.26% 8 Kuwait
India's telecommunication network is the second largest in the world by number of telephone users [3] (both fixed and mobile phones) with over 1.19 billion subscribers as of September 2024. [4] It has one of the lowest call tariffs in the world enabled by multiple large-scale telecom operators and the ensuant hyper-competition between them.
This list ranks the countries of the world by the number of mobile phone numbers in use. As an important caveat, this list does not provide the number of mobile phones in use. It is common for each SIM card has a separate phone number, so phones with multiple SIM cards will have multiple phone numbers.
Internet users are defined as persons who accessed the Internet in the last 12 months from any device, including mobile phones. [Note 1] Percentage is the percentage of a country's population that are Internet users. Estimates are derived either from household surveys or from Internet subscription data. [4]
Number of Indian consumers who were expected to purchase something online in 2021: 289.1 million. [60] Number of Indian consumers who were expected to purchase something online in last 2022: 312.5 million. [60] Indian e-commerce industry net income in 2017: ₹2.46 trillion. Indian e-commerce industry net income estimated in 2018: ₹3.02 trillion.
Smartphone penetration vs. desktop use differs substantially by country. Some countries, like Russia, still have smartphone use as low as 22.35% (as a fraction of all web use), [134] but in most western countries, smartphone use is close to 50% of all web use. This doesn't mean that only half of the population has a smartphone, could mean ...
Note: Because a single Internet subscription may be shared by many people and a single person my have more than one subscription, the penetration rate will not reflect the actual level of access to broadband Internet of the population and penetration rates larger than 100% are possible.