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MetaFacts TUP/Technology User Profile analysis results for subscribers

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Category: TUP 2022

TUP 2022-the 40th wave

Posted on February 10, 2024May 20, 2024

Feeling technology is moving too fast to keep up

Having the feeling that technology is like a rising escalator moving farther and farther away is more prominent among older than younger adults in the US, Germany, the UK, Japan, and China. Among each successively older group of online adults, a higher share feel that technology is moving too fast for them to keep up. The Covid pandemic gave many online users a temporary respite from feeling overwhelmed by technology, but the feeling has returned to 2021 levels.

This MetaFAQs reports on the percentage of online adults who agree with the statement, “I feel like technology is moving too fast for me to keep up,” split by country and age group. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0210_life] in TUP Lenses: User Profile

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Posted on February 9, 2024April 24, 2024

In most countries, younger adults boost any Apple iPhone market expansion

Apple’s iPhone slightly leads among American smartphone users and is approaching the halfway mark among smartphone users in the UK. However, the iPhone is losing its share in Japan, and its status in China has been mixed from 2019 through 2023. In nearly every country surveyed, the iPhone’s market penetration has been driven by younger smartphone users, while penetration rates among older smartphone users have remained relatively flat.

This MetaFAQs reports on the percentage of smartphone users using an Apple iPhone split by country and age category. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0209_ipht] in TUP Lenses: Mobile Phones; User Profile; Technology Ecosystems

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Posted on February 7, 2024May 20, 2024

Younger adults continue to drive computer acquisition

Online adults in most countries worldwide boosted their computer buying during the pandemic, only to return to near prepandemic levels. In the US and Germany, the peak was in 2021; in the UK, the highest refresh was not until 2023. Online adults in Japan maintained low levels. The highest shares of recently acquired computers were younger adults aged 18 to 24 or 25 to 34.

This MetaFAQs reports on the percentage of online adults who acquired a primary PC in the previous 12 months, split by country and age group. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0207_youu] in TUP Lenses: Devices; PCs; User Profile

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Posted on February 6, 2024March 19, 2024

American printing trends affected by employment, generation, education

As a chilling trend for the printer industry, one of the fastest growing segments among Americans is the growing percentage of those who do not use a printer at home, at their workplace, in a school or library, or anywhere else. Furthermore, Gen Z adults, often considered a forerunner of market adoption, stand out for their disadoption.

This MetaFAQs reports on the percentages of Americans based on their active printer and home printer usage in two mutually exclusive ways: those using any printer or no printer and those using a home printer or not using a home printer. We have split the results by generation – Gen Z, millennial, Gen X, Boomer, and Silent/Greatest – from 2010 through 2023. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0206_otpr] in TUP Lenses: Printers; User Profile

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Posted on February 6, 2024April 23, 2024

The remote work age gap is narrowing in most countries

With the onset of the pandemic, there were many divisions between those who worked remotely and those who never worked remotely. One distinguishing characteristic was the employee’s age, although this factor is associated with many other socioeconomic characteristics. From a broad under-40 and 40-plus perspective, employees further along and in more information-oriented professions had higher remote working rates, while younger adults starting their careers had lower rates.
Since 2021, the age gap between remote and non-remote employees has narrowed in most of the countries surveyed—the US, Germany, the UK, and Japan.

This MetaFAQs reports on the percentage of employees who never work remotely by country and age group (18 to 39 and 40+), detailing the trend from 2021 to 2023. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0206_wfht] in TUP Lenses: User Profile; Work/Life Balance

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Posted on February 5, 2024February 29, 2024

The unbundling of American home PCs and home printers

The unbundling of American home PCs and home printers – One of the biggest home technology shifts among American adults involves their use (or non-use) of home computers and home printers. Only a decade ago, it was widespread practice to have both a home computer and home printer, and often to buy them at the same time. That has changed dramatically, as the number of Americans using both has plummeted. Instead, there has been substantial growth in the share of Americans using only a home printer or neither a home computer nor a home printer. This shift has played out differently among Gen Z and millennial Americans than among Gen X or Silent/Greatest generations.

This MetaFAQs reports on the number and percentage of Americans by their combination of use and non-use of home computers and home printers. These are split by generational age group. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0205_core] in TUP Lenses: PCs; Printers; User Profile

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Posted on February 4, 2024May 9, 2025

Most digital work collaboration progress is supported by Gen Z and Millennials

The practice of working across the web using collaborative platforms such as Google Docs has remained largely unchanged since 2018. Among millennials in China and the US, the activity has even decreased. Gen Z adults across most countries surveyed have the highest or second-highest penetration rates.

This MetaFAQs reports on the percentage of online adults who regularly collaborate on work files in the US, Germany, the UK, Japan, and China split by age generation. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0204_colt] in TUP Lenses: User Profile; Activities; Work/Life Balance

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Posted on February 2, 2024May 20, 2024

Three-fourths of American Gen Z adults use an Apple device, up from two-thirds, while the UK has the reverse trend

Anchoring Apple’s market strength is its technology ecosystem, primarily when more than one Apple device is used with another. One of the most basic market metrics of Apple’s progress is whether an adult is using at least one Apple OS device – an iPhone, an iPad, or a Mac.

This MetaFAQs reports on the percentage of online adults actively using at least one Apple OS device, split by country and age generation. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0202_appt] in TUP Lenses: User Profile; Technology Ecosystems; Devices; Mobile Phones; Tablets; PCs

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Posted on February 1, 2024May 20, 2024

IT, FIRE, and professional industry employees sustain the highest remote working rates

Even before the pandemic, working remotely has been a mixed blessing for IT staff. While many employees in the information technology industry are able to work remotely and support geographically dispersed organizations, many have historically needed to work well beyond the confines of a 40-hour workweek or 9 to 5 schedule. Similarly, many workers in real estate and other professions have experienced the benefits that come with pitfalls. With the onset of the pandemic, the gap has become clearer between employees in these industries and the average worker.

This MetaFAQs reports on the percentage of employees in the IT/FIRE/Professional industries who work remotely at least some of the time, and contrasts their share with the national averages in the US, Germany, UK, Japan, and China. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0201_firt] in TUP Lenses: User Profile; Work/Life Balance

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Posted on January 30, 2024September 25, 2024

Game console usage sags among each generation; not game over among Gen Z

Game consoles have been a fixture among a sizable portion of adults for decades, although each earlier generation continues to lose interest. Since 2018, fewer adults in later generations have actively used a game console with each passing year.

This MetaFAQs reports on the multi-year change in the percentage of online adults in the US, Germany, the UK, Japan, and China who actively use a game console, split by age generation. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0130_cont] in TUP Lenses: User Profile; Activities; Game Consoles, Gaming PCs, and Game-Playing; Home Entertainment

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TUP TOPICS

  • Activities
  • Age
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  • Android
  • Apple
  • Boomers
  • Commercial
  • Communication
  • Computers
  • Connected devices
  • Devices
  • Ecosystems
  • Elders
  • Employees
  • Employment status
  • Generations
  • Gen X
  • Gen Z
  • Home PCs
  • iPad
  • iPhone
  • Life stage
  • Market penetration
  • Microsoft
  • Microsoft Windows
  • Millennials
  • Mobile phones
  • Operating systems
  • Pandemic
  • PC activities
  • PCs
  • Penetration
  • Printers
  • Remote workers
  • Remote working
  • Smartphone activities
  • Smartphones
  • Sociodemographics
  • Tablets
  • Technology Ecosystems
  • Trends
  • User Profile
  • Windows
  • Work-related activities
  • Work from home

RECENT METAFAQS, TUPDATES, AND HIGHLIGHTS

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  • Aging ASUS work computers due for a refresh
  • Lenovo work computer users-a stable if unexcited group
  • Apple work computer users at a crossroads
  • Dell’s moribund home computer base
  • iPhone user base – broader and still somehow different
  • Lenovo’s leading edge – in home computing
  • Brother home printer successes may lead to future challenges
  • Inertia and tradition defend Epson home printer installed base

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