56 %
of tablet owners use social networking services on their device, while 51 % consume music and / or videos, and 46 % read ebooks.
Some of this decline may be tied to lower daily news consumption among
Android tablet owners, the data indicates.
It's interesting to see that as much as 61 % of
tablet owners use their devices to read ebooks, only 5 % less than watching videos.
Among tablet owners, 63 % said they regularly watch video on their tablets, with 69 % of all tablet video viewers regularly watching long - form video.
Only 21 percent of
tablet owners said they get their news mainly through apps they have downloaded.
Canadian
tablet owners tend to be younger (12 - 49) and are more in tune with technology products.
Not surprising, given that more than a third of
tablet owners report having content on their devices they don't want anyone else to see.
Many
tablet owners just want to play video, browse the web, and check social media accounts.
It's good to know that the S1 and S2 will ship with 3.2 as
many tablet owners are still waiting to get their 3.1 updates!
Tablet owners also tend to have a larger disposable income, as tablets are often bought outright rather than subsidized by operators.
Several Pixel
C tablet owners took to social media over the weekend to say that the latest Android 8.1 update caused their tablet to factory reset and wipe all data.
58 percent of
tablet owners consumed world, national or local news on their devices, with 1 in 4 consuming this content on a near - daily basis on their tablets.
Perhaps the margin of error is less than a percentage point which would mean there are twice as many eReader owners
as Tablet owners.
The overwhelming majority of people who are
potential tablet owners could care less about processor speed, memory, storage, or operating system.
Fire
HD tablet owners have access to a one - of - a-kind app store experience where over $ 10,000 in apps, games, and even in - app items are actually free.
We're interested as to whether or not there's interest in such a powerful machine, which is targeting not
only tablet owners, but laptop consumers too.
The living room and the bedroom are the only two locations where
polled tablet owners chose their slate over their smartphone.
But new data on
how tablet owners actually consume content on their tablets may help publishers realize this isn't the right venture to channel their resources into.
The fact that it does translation is cool and off - line reading could be just what some
WiFi tablet owners are looking for!
The study also found that spending on apps by
tablet owners grew 42 % year - to - year, while smartphone spending on apps grew 44 % year - to - year.
The tablet market in itself is wider than ever when they have to compete with major contenders and thus their speculation remains
whether tablet owners really want to read.
There's even a slightly ridiculous mirror app, which uses the front - facing camera and which only the most self -
conscious tablet owners are likely to appreciate.
It looks like right now, to find the best apps,
Android tablet owners will have to hunt through several stores.
While most smartphone and
tablet owners use their fingers to communicate with their device, a stylus can be used for precise writing and drawing.
They provide comprehensive levels of support, and are great for first -
time tablet owners.
Thirty - two percent of
tablet owners say they won't buy a small TV even though they're watching more online video overall.
An interesting feature, especially
for tablet owners: You can download a number of your books to your local device.
Meanwhile, men make up 57 percent
of tablet owners, which is down from 61 percent in the third quarter.
One of the most interesting aspects of the results was the fact that
tablet owners tend to spend more.
What has played out instead is that
many tablet owners are holding onto their devices for more than 3 years and in some instances more than 4 years.
New Fire
tablet owners in the U.S. get 500 Amazon Coins to start them off with paid apps (a $ 5 value).
Nook tablet owners who have encountered this issue and have not contacted Barnes & Noble yet are advised to do so and wait for a replacement adapter.
Looking more closely at device owners who read e-books as of December 2011, we found that among
tablet owners who read an e-book in the past year, 81 % did so on their tablet computer:
The study found that nearly 2 in 5 U.S.
tablet owners read newspapers and / or magazines on their device in August, with 1 in 10 reading publications almost daily.
The number of
U.S. tablet owners just about doubled from 10 percent to 19 percent between the middle of December and the start of January, according to a Pew Internet report out today.