Opera Mini users viewed more than 10 billion
pages in one month for the first time, according to the State of the Mobile Web report by
Opera. .
- In June 2009, Opera Mini had nearly 26.5 million unique consumer
users, a 4.2% increase from May 2009 and more than 143% compared to
June 2008. These numbers reflect only the Opera Mini users who have
specifically chosen to install the browser on their phone. - Those 26.5 million people viewed more than 10.4 billion pages in
June 2009. This means that Opera Mini servers were processing more than
346 million pages per day. Since May, page views have gone up 8.4%.
Since June 2008, page views have increased 224%. - In June 2009, Opera Mini users generated more than 168.4 million MB
of data for operators worldwide. Since May, the data consumed went up
by 5.6%. Data in Opera Mini is compressed up to 90%. If this data were
uncompressed, Opera Mini users would have viewed almost 1.7 PB of data
in June. Since June 2008, data traffic is up 236%. - The top 10 countries for Opera Mini usage this month are (in
order): Russia, Indonesia, India, China, Ukraine, South Africa, U.S.,
U.K., Poland, Nigeria. - In the top 10 list of countries, India continued to move up the rankings overtaking China for third place.
- Nokia phones continue to be the handsets of preference for Opera
Mini users, with Sony Ericsson claiming second place. BlackBerry and
Samsung phones are the preference in the United States. - In North America, BlackBerry handsets are the most popular, while
Sony Ericsson handsets are the most popular in the Caribbean by a wide
margin. - Google is the number one most visited site in all the countries,
with the exception of Costa Rica, where Hi5 takes the number 1 spot. - Facebook remains the most popular social network in North America,
while Hi5 is the most popular social network for mobile phones the
Caribbean.
FUN FACTS:
- If every consumer Opera Mini user took a Nokia 6300 (the most
popular phone among Opera Mini users) and stacked them vertically, top
to bottom, the resulting tower would stretch to the International Space
Station and back again...4 times. - Those same 26.5 million phones would stretch almost halfway around the Earth (.44 the equatorial radius).
- 26.5 million Nokia 6300s outweigh the combined launch weight of a space shuttle with booster rockets and a Boeing 747.
The report provides information on the top global trends
affecting the mobile Web. The full report is available from http://www.opera.com/smw/
(English only). In addition to the top global trends and country
snapshots, the report highlights trends in North America and the
Caribbean