Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Mobile devices, video streaming doubling Canadians' time spent online: comScore

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Nov, 2014 10:42 AM

    TORONTO — As Canadians continue to get hooked on their smartphones, tablets and streaming video they're almost doubling the amount of time they spend online, according to measurement firm comScore.

    As of August, there were about 27.8 million Canadian adults accessing the Internet with a computer, comScore reports. On average, they spent almost 39 hours a month browsing the web with a desktop or laptop.

    But when accounting for watching Internet video and using mobile devices, the average time spent online shot up to nearly 75 hours a month, or about 2.5 hours a day.

    "We're seeing extremely large growth," says comScore vice president of sales Bryan Segal.

    "It really points to the fact of how much impact — in terms of engagement and time spent — that mobile is having on what we traditionally looked at as a PC world."

    Canadians in the 25-to-34 demographic were seen to be spending the most time online, averaging around 110 hours a month across various devices. Only about 50 of those hours were linked to web browsing on a computer.

    The oldest Canadians tracked by comScore, ages 55 and older, were spending just 20 or so hours with a mobile device or streaming video a month. The bulk of their online hours were devoted to web browsing on a computer.

    The use of mobile apps is really driving the spike in Canadians' online time, comScore says.

    It's estimated that Canadians who own smartphones and tablets are now spending about 43 per cent of their overall online time within an app.

    And app usage accounts for over 80 per cent of the time Canadians spend online with a mobile device, versus just 20 per cent spent using a web browser.

    Men are slightly more likely to use mobile apps, according to comScore, but women spend more time with their favourite apps.

    Similarly, men are more likely to use a mobile device's web browser but women spend more time using it.

    As of June, comScore counted 18 million smartphones in Canada (a 12 per cent increase from June 2013) and 7.8 million tablets (up 37 per cent in a year).

    About 78 per cent of all Canadians owning a cellphone were using a smartphone, which was second highest among the countries comScore tracks (behind Spain and ahead of the United Kingdom, the United States and Italy).

    About four per cent of Canadian Internet users — or around 1.3 million people — now strictly use mobile devices to go online and no longer use a laptop or desktop, comScore says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bus in fatal train crash last year was over the speed limit: report

    Bus in fatal train crash last year was over the speed limit: report
    OTTAWA - The Transportation Safety Board says the city bus which collided with a train last year was travelling above the speed limit at the time of the fatal crash.

    Bus in fatal train crash last year was over the speed limit: report

    Today on the Hill: Diplomats, academics talk about Harper at the UN

    Today on the Hill: Diplomats, academics talk about Harper at the UN
    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is in the Big Apple today, where he'll speak to the United Nations General Assembly this week for the first time in four years.

    Today on the Hill: Diplomats, academics talk about Harper at the UN

    Analysis of Russia sanctions: Canada's toughest, but not when it comes to oil

    Analysis of Russia sanctions: Canada's toughest, but not when it comes to oil
    NEW YORK - For all its much-touted toughness in imposing economic sanctions against Russia, Canada has been significantly more timid against one particular target: the oil industry.

    Analysis of Russia sanctions: Canada's toughest, but not when it comes to oil

    Vancouver Restaurateur To Be Sentenced After Pleading Guilty To Using Hidden Camera

    Vancouver Restaurateur To Be Sentenced After Pleading Guilty To Using Hidden Camera
    VANCOUVER - The former co-owner of a now-closed Vancouver restaurant will be sentenced in December after pleading guilty to one count of secretly observing nudity in a private place.

    Vancouver Restaurateur To Be Sentenced After Pleading Guilty To Using Hidden Camera

    Sister Kathryn Ford Says She Smoked Crack With Rob Ford

    Sister Kathryn Ford Says She Smoked Crack With Rob Ford
    Rob Ford's sister told police the Toronto mayor was smoking crack cocaine with her one night in late April in the company of a drug dealer and a friend of Ford's who is facing criminal charges, according to newly released documents.

    Sister Kathryn Ford Says She Smoked Crack With Rob Ford

    You Can Have Site C or LNG But Not Both: First Nation tells B.C. government

    You Can Have Site C or LNG But Not Both: First Nation tells B.C. government
    VANCOUVER - With a decision imminent on the Site C hydroelectric project in northeastern British Columbia, area First Nations have delivered a message to the provincial government: You can have the dam or you can have liquefied natural gas but you will not get both.

    You Can Have Site C or LNG But Not Both: First Nation tells B.C. government