If Caroline Cua’s iPhone looked anything like her closet, where she keeps dozens of pairs of shoes, she would have screen after screen of applications.
But instead, her iPhone is all but empty. Since she bought it nearly a year ago, Cua, 27, who works for a transportation service in San Francisco, has downloaded precisely five programs. And though she uses four of those apps “religiously,” the ones she favors — Pandora, the radio station, and Shazam, the music identifier — are your basic black pumps, she says.
And that’s just fine with her, until she finds herself among friends whose iPhones are studded with icons. When a fellow iPhone owner asked recently to see her apps, she grew self-conscious.
PHOTO: AFP
“I said to him: ‘OK, now I’m officially feeling like a loser,’” she recalled.
Cua is not an exception. She is the rule. The average iPhone or iPod Touch owner uses five to 10 apps regularly, says Flurry, a firm that studies mobile trends. This despite the surfeit of available apps: some 140,000 and counting.
Last week’s announcement of the Apple iPad, a tablet device that runs iPhone applications and will not be available until March, has already spurred the development of more, including a version of a drawing app called Brushes; Nova, a shooter game; and Apple’s own app called iBooks, which will connect to its new online e-bookstore.
But that doesn’t mean that people will change their habits. Actually, it may just make them feel a tad more overwhelmed. The next generation of gadget users might prove different, but for now it is clear that people prefer fewer choices, and that they gravitate consistently toward the same small number of things that they like. Owners of iPhone are no different from cable TV subscribers with hundreds of channels to choose from who end up watching the same half-dozen.
So, for every zealous owner whose iPhone is loaded with little-known programs that predict asteroid fly-bys, there are many more Caroline Cuas, who seldom venture outside the predictable. Most say they’re too busy, too lazy or just plain flummoxed by the choices.
“I think I’m supposed to want more of them than I have,” said Julie Graham, a psychotherapist in San Francisco who echoed Cua’s vague anxiety. “There’s this sense that I’m missing out on something I didn’t know I needed.”
Graham, 50, said friends were shocked when she confessed to having failed to download Urban Spoon, a compendium of restaurant reviews. She now has it — and seldom uses it.
“I don’t have time,” she said.
Since apps were introduced in 2008, rivals like Palm, Microsoft, Google and Research in Motion have rushed out their own catalog of mobile applications.
A survey of iPhones, iPod Touch and Android users conducted in July 2009 by AdMob, an advertising network that helps people promote their applications on smartphones, found that people discover apps most often by browsing app stores. And even though the iTunes store is bloated with offerings, people tend to gravitate to the most popular.”
“For all the tens of thousands of apps out there, the odds of being exposed to more than a thousand are very small,” said Stewart Putney, the founder and chief executive of Moblyng, a company in Redwood City, California, that develops applications for mobile devices.
“The top apps featured at the store do change out,” Putney said. “But most users will never see more than 1 percent of the total apps available.”
A study last year by Pinch Media found that most people stop using their applications pretty quickly, particularly if those apps are free.
At the app-happy end of the spectrum is Phil Minasian, 18, a college freshman in West Lafayette, Indiana. Minasian said his iPhone is loaded with games and word puzzles.
Minasian said he believed that people who don’t download apps in abundance are missing out.
“If people put the time in, they can definitely find apps they’ll like and that help with everyday life,” he said.
With the help of — you guessed it — an app for finding apps, he found the Weather Channel app, which he prefers to the weather program that came with his iPhone.
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