Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
Tech

Mobile web usage has surpassed computer-based in Canada, says comScore

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Jan, 2015 05:02 PM
    Canadians are now spending more time online with their mobile devices than with their computers, says digital measurement firm comScore.
     
    According to recently released figures, 51 per cent of the Canadian Internet traffic that comScore tracked was linked to a phone or tablet, while 49 per cent was tied to a computer.
     
    Mobile web usage is expected to grow more in 2015 than the time spent online with computers, a trend that has already been seen in other countries, says comScore Canada president Brent Bernie.
     
    "The U.S. is at 61 per cent mobile and I expect Canada will continue to move (in that direction)," Bernie says.
     
    "My guess — and I'm not great at crystal-balling things — my call would be we'll get to two-thirds of usage being mobile. How long that takes? A year, a year-and-a-half maybe?"
     
    When comScore expanded its Canadian tracking methods last year to include mobile traffic it found the time Canadians spent online had pretty much doubled compared to previous estimates.
     
    The average amount of time Canadians spent online shot up to nearly 75 hours a month, or about 2.5 hours a day.
     
    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.
     
    Many Canadians would be shocked to learn how much time they actually spend online, Bernie says. Mobile users who habitually take a quick peek at their smartphone may not realize those short interactions are adding up to hours.
     
    "Because these devices add so much convenience to people's lives and they can go on them and off them (easily) they're filling time they normally would've been doing other things," says Bernie.
     
    "People are filling what might've been spare time before (thinking), 'Oh, I'm going to check this out' or 'Oh, let me check out that thing I saw last night and see if I can find that website.'"
     
    About five per cent of Canadian Internet users are now mobile-only consumers, comScore says, meaning they almost never use a desktop or laptop computer to go online anymore and strictly access the Internet with smartphones and tablets.
     
    On mobile devices, comScore says over 80 per cent of the time Canadians spend online is with an app versus using a web browser.
     
    "Apps are the dominant portion of people's time on mobile and we see the same thing in the U.S.," Bernie says.
     
    He expects time spent online will only increase as more and more devices add online connectivity.
     
    "As we go forward — gaming consoles, wearables, cars, all those things — it just expands exponentially the places people can consume (the Internet)."

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Soon, an app to reduce your stress

    Soon, an app to reduce your stress
    Managing stress could soon be literally at your fingertips as researchers have now developed a stress management app that has the ability to identify when...

    Soon, an app to reduce your stress

    Google Glass app that reads emotions, also reveals age

    Google Glass app that reads emotions, also reveals age
    What if an app can reveal what the person you are in a conversation with is thinking? This Google Glass - a soon to be launched smart eye-wear - app...

    Google Glass app that reads emotions, also reveals age

    Soon batteries to run on sugar

    Soon batteries to run on sugar
    In a breakthrough to develop long-lasting batteries for smartphones and other gadgets, scientists have successfully created a sugar biobattery that...

    Soon batteries to run on sugar

    App to help deal with emergency heart conditions

    App to help deal with emergency heart conditions
    Taking the right decision in a matter of seconds is crucial when dealing with heart attacks or acute heart diseases. The process will become a lot easier with the help of a new app....

    App to help deal with emergency heart conditions

    Don't rely on YouTube videos to save lives

    Don't rely on YouTube videos to save lives
    YouTube is full of videos depicting life saving techniques like Cardio-pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and Basic Life Support (BLS) but only a handful of these...

    Don't rely on YouTube videos to save lives

    New tool maps how drug abuse affects brain

    New tool maps how drug abuse affects brain
    The new technology may aid in improving brain-cancer surgery and tissue engineering, and lead to better treatment options for recovering drug addicts...

    New tool maps how drug abuse affects brain