Android still the dominant mobile OS with 1 billion active users


Free-falling product demos and Rube Goldberg multimedia installations aside, there's always a level of predictability to an opening day keynote. And Google I/O 2014 is no exception. Like clockwork, SVP Sundar Pichai took to the stage in San Francisco this morning to tick off the company's latest accomplishments. He started off by touting one of the company's biggest strengths: Android. According to Pichai, Google now has over 1 billion active users (that's as of the last 30 days) on the OS. Google's apparently opted to track 30-day usage as opposed to year-over-year numbers as in the past. That said, last year, the company boasted 900 million Android activations, up from 400 million the year before. We likely won't get a direct comparison due to the change in tracking, but even with the numbers we have, it's clear Android is still the dominant mobile platform.


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During its WWDC 2014 keynote earlier this month, Apple's Tim Cook announced the company had reached 800 million iOS devices to date, fewer than Google's Android activation numbers from the year prior.


Continuing the theme of unconventional stat tracking, Pichai championed the strength of the platform saying Android users send 20 billion text messages each day and 93 million selfies. What's more, those self-absorbed phone holders apparently take 1.5 trillion steps each day, and check their handsets a total of 100 billion times every 24 hours.


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