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The Internet Hardware

Mobile Browsing Just Overtook the Desktop For the First Time (alphr.com) 80

More users around the world are accessing the internet from mobile devices than from desktop computers for the first time, according to internet monitoring firm StatCounter. The combined traffic from mobile and tablets devices amounted to 51.3 percent, compared to desktop computers that contributed to 48.7 percent of the traffic. From a report on Alphr: StatCounter's CEO, Aodhan Cullen, believes this should be a wake-up call to professionals who still view mobile optimisation as an afterthought. "Mobile compatibility is increasingly important not just because of growing traffic but because Google favors mobile friendly websites for its mobile search results," he said. While the trend is pretty obvious worldwide, interestingly the graph is skewed by mobile adoption outside of the west. While the UK and USA still have the desktop on top (55.6% to 44.4% and 58% to 42% respectively), 78% of India's internet access is via mobile. Cullen believes that post-Brexit with a need to trade beyond the EU, these kind of concerns should be on every site owner's mind.
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Mobile Browsing Just Overtook the Desktop For the First Time

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  • Screw that. (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    I'm not going to waste my time "optimizing" a goddamn web page intended for a real computer just because some crappy little spyware device has a crappy, underpowered browser with a vastly inferior input method. If you can't properly navigate my site on your little pile of crap device, maybe you should grow up and use a real computer rather than your little government-tracks-you toy.

    The world is going to see its error in going with these little botnet, spying, tracking devices soon enough, anyway when the w

    • by Falos ( 2905315 )
      No they won't. They'll keep drinking. They'll complain, but so long as it (eventually) pulls up whatever social site or curated headlines they want they'll keep drinking. And blaming autocorrect.

      Teenage Me made a few bucks off these people. They always called sooner or later - later being when their browser won't even launch. Next Gen Me will do what he can, but it's not as easy to get under the hood when your OS is a decorative garden. I'll probably suggest he learn to replace dropped screens.

      "It mus
    • I feel your pain. UI development is growing ever more complex and messy.

      In the pre-web days you had pretty much one target UI platform and it all worked the same on all desktops. Life was smooth*.

      Then the web came along with different browser brands and versions. You had to test the UI on multiple browser brands and combo's. One org I worked for had a testing room with about 10 variations of browsers and OS's. When the testers were not available, I had to visit all 10 for every release. I considered gluing

    • Re:Screw that. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Tuesday November 01, 2016 @05:25PM (#53194707)

      I'm not going to waste my time "optimizing" a goddamn web page intended for a real computer just because some crappy little spyware device has a crappy, underpowered browser with a vastly inferior input method.

      As a user of a "real computer", I have no problems with this. However, stop using my "real computer" as an excuse to require my browser run your needless javascript.

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        stop using my "real computer" as an excuse to require my browser run your needless javascript.

        Please clarify your comment. In your opinion, is there necessary JavaScript, or is all JavaScript "needless" to you?

        There are plenty of web applications that could not be created without script, and plenty more that would be horribly inefficient (full page reload per click and/or hundreds of iframes on one screen) without script. Good luck making a web-based paint program or spreadsheet without script. And if you say those apps should be native instead of using the web platform, good luck running a Mac-only

        • There are plenty of web applications that could not be created without script

          Absolutely, those are applications. I'm talking about web pages, the things that display information and you can navigate around.

          And if you say those apps should be native instead of using the web platform, good luck running a Mac-only app on your Windows PC or a Windows-only app on your Mac.

          Javascript programs are implicitly open source, so just use open source programs that use a multiplatform framework like Qt. Problem solved.

          • by tepples ( 727027 )

            Absolutely, those are applications. I'm talking about web pages, the things that display information and you can navigate around.

            The line between the two is by no means bright. For example, is a discussion forum such as Slashdot a "page" or an "application"?

            Javascript programs are implicitly open source

            A minified program in JavaScript is not "the preferred form of a work for making modifications to it".

            so just use open source programs that use a multiplatform framework like Qt. Problem solved.

            If you make a web application, you have to test it on each major browser engine. In practice, this means Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and initially using Chrome as a proxy for Safari. But if you change from offering one web application to offering five native applications, you end up ha

            • The line between the two is by no means bright. For example, is a discussion forum such as Slashdot a "page" or an "application"?

              I disagree, it's quite clear. Slashdot's forums are clearly a page. That said, there should be tag that is a placeholder for content to retrieve until it's exposed. expand/collapse stuff can already be done using CSS.

              if you change from offering one web application to offering five native applications, you end up having to compile, test, and deploy on all five platforms' stores

              You don't need to use "stores" and with Qt you don't have to do anything but recompile. You don't even have to test for compatibility bullshit like webdev, so it's even easier. See, problem solved.

              • by tepples ( 727027 )

                You don't need to use "stores"

                The only ways to go around the store are even more expensive: A. buy a Mac for each of your iOS users so that they can install the application from source code using Xcode, or B. the iOS Developer Enterprise Program, which requires employing all your users.

                and with Qt you don't have to do anything but recompile.

                Is there a guide to using a Linux PC to cross-compile a Qt application for Windows, macOS, Android, and iOS? And how can one be sure that it will work across all platforms without testing, as opposed to inadvertently relying on implementation-defined, uns

                • The only ways to go around the store are even more expensive: A. buy a Mac for each of your iOS users so that they can install the application from source code using Xcode, or B. the iOS Developer Enterprise Program, which requires employing all your users.

                  LOL! oh man, you're helpless.

                  • by tepples ( 727027 )

                    Are you recommending that a business distribute an application that relies on jailbreaking, which in turn relies on a security defect that Apple can close at any time?

                    • so which is it, free application that brings in no money or business a application that somehow can't afford testing on multiple platforms?

                    • by tepples ( 727027 )

                      It's both, or more precisely the transition from one to the other: someone developing a free application to see whether he can use it as the minimum viable product for a new company.

                    • The market is saturated. Do or do not, there is no try.

        • Good luck making a web-based paint program or spreadsheet without script.

          You are assuming that a web-based spreadsheet is a sane idea.

          • by tepples ( 727027 )

            You are assuming that a web-based spreadsheet is a sane idea.

            It's a less insane idea than a Mac-based spreadsheet that you can't run because your computer happens not to be a Mac, or a Windows-based spreadsheet that you can't run because your computer happens not to have a Windows license or to even have an x86-64 CPU in the first place, such as "mobile" (here meaning an ARM-powered device running a smartphone-derived operating system).

    • came out I rarely visit a lot of sites I use to as they all changed their lay out to some POS where the hell is the navigation even for desktop users. Add in the bizare layout for news sites where you have no idea what is what and mobile has ruined the internet desktop experience.

      I blame it on web designers crying the sky is falling if you don't use responsive design and you'll loose all your customers just so they can scare their customers to have their sites redesigned once more.

    • I'm not going to waste my time "optimizing" a goddamn web page intended for a real computer just because.

      If it's like most web pages I've seen, you don't "optimize" nothin', for anything.

    • As if a desktop or laptop is any less trackable/spyable.

  • There is a big difference between opening up a browser and jumping from page to page as you follow the links; and having a mobile application ping some server for the latest NFL score so that it can update its status bar. I have tried to 'browse' the web using my phone and it is a completely different experience than doing the same thing on my desktop. What is really being measured here?
    • I browse all the time on my phone and tablet. It is simple and fast and I am seldom typing so they work great. In the morning when I need a quick catch up I load something like 30 tabs at once on my laptop, but during the day a touch screen covers most of my needs

    • I'm to the point now with my Nexus 6 that I prefer my phone to the desktop. That mouse is slower than my touch screen, and I can't easily zoom.

      • " and I can't easily zoom"

        ctrl+scroll wheel is too challenging?
        • Obviously the moron is strong with this one, just nod and move along as this twit is probably the it manager at your company

        • Again... the mouse is slower. So saying use the mouse doesn't really invalidate my point. Not to mention that while the browser may "zoom", its still very clunky and many pages change up their rendering because the window stays the same size and everything is just enlarged. It's not a REAL zoom if the page changes now is it?

      • Sigh, yeh, I have got to the point of trying to pinch zoom pictures in real books occasionally damnit.

  • A trend I've spotted: The desktop version of some websites are now also optimized for mobile.

    There's a little three-stripe menu in the corner, a bunch of icons with no hint about what they might represent, and a list of about 30 words in a huge font. The rest of my 24-inch monitor is filled with white space.

    To get any further information, I need to click icons to dig down and get fed little batches of a few more words or pictures.

    • by mlts ( 1038732 )

      Don't forget the "top 10 list", each item being on a separate page, and being about a postage stamp in size, surrounded by ads. Thankfully said sites now give a middle finger to people using ad-blockers, so one knows the site is a waste of time and can move onto other things.

      • so one knows the site is a waste of time/quote? This exactly. And maybe because I'm older and know more things now, but there seems to be a declining amount of content on the web.

  • by kuzb ( 724081 ) on Tuesday November 01, 2016 @05:20PM (#53194669)
    We need to keep in mind here that a sizable amount of HTTP traffic is just fetching ads for freemeium software.
  • by AndyKron ( 937105 ) on Tuesday November 01, 2016 @05:44PM (#53194857)
    I'd rather surf the 'net with my desktop than my little phone display no matter how crispy it is. What are people thinking?
    • There is a case to be made that mobile users are a different segment of the market to desktop users. It is no longer true that the mobile users are all teenagers with low IQ and no money, but it may still be the case that the desktop users are more likely to have money.

    • by geek ( 5680 )

      I'd rather surf the 'net with my desktop than my little phone display no matter how crispy it is. What are people thinking?

      Can you bring your desktop into the bathroom with you at work? That appears to be where half my coworkers spend 90% of their time.

      • by Calydor ( 739835 )

        Maybe they spend that long in the bathroom BECAUSE they bring their phone or tablet, instead of having Facebook calling them back to the office and the computer?

    • I'd rather surf the 'net with my desktop than my little phone display no matter how crispy it is. What are people thinking?

      They may be thinking that an always-on device they have in their pocket that uses 1/100th as much power as running their desktop computer, is much more convenient for quickly looking-up information.

      HTML is a markup language. It can be wrapped to any size viewport you wish, or at least it could if web "designers" didn't abuse it quite so badly. So a phone isn't necessarily inferior. In

  • by PJ6 ( 1151747 ) on Tuesday November 01, 2016 @06:59PM (#53195317)
    I watched lots of perfectly good websites get utterly trashed *years* ago to make them more "mobile friendly".

    Now that tablet sales are stagnant, I can't wait for them to find some new destructive trend to chase.

    Like, someone invents an ass-browser, so all those websites will be redone again, with a brown palette, and turd-shaped buttons to make them "ass-friendly".
  • The power went out so I had to use my phone until I could get the generator connected, which took all morning as I've been putting off adding the inlet and junction box. The UPS kept my internet connection up for some hours, though. Sadly, I loaded G+ and that accounts for the traffic difference

  • I check sites several times a day with my phone, but when I want to read, I use my computer.

  • Anyone building a site really only cares about their own metrics. The site I work on had mobile surpass desktop back in January.

    Though, given the comments, I wonder if anyone here even builds a site of their own, outside of a personal project.

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