Skip to main content

Americans were obsessed with mobile apps on Thanksgiving

Using a Smartphone
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Detailed within a recent study conducted by app analytics company Flurry, mobile app use spiked on Thanksgiving 2013 with approximately 1.3 billion app starts in the United States. Rising nearly 75 percent year over year, Thanksgiving 2012 accounted for about 750 million app starts. The total figure has also tripled in size since 2011 which brought in about 400 million app session starts on Turkey Day. Flurry attributes the large spike in activity to the significant change in how we utilize mobile devices over traditional computers when working, playing games and relaxing while consuming media.

Specifically, media apps that allow users to consume feature-length movies, music, television shows, YouTube videos and photos where the most popular when compared to the week prior to Thanksgiving. Video games also spiked significantly week over week, likely due to more people looking for some entertainment while relaxing over the holiday weekend. Usage of lifestyle apps that include books and magazines rose slightly year over year as well as social networking applications like Facebook and Twitter.

smartphone-usage-thanksgiving
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Interestingly, the use of shopping apps didn’t spike as sharply week over week compared to previous years. However, it’s likely that consumers started their holiday shopping earlier due to the shortened shopping season between Black Friday and Christmas this year. In fact, Flurry reports that shopping app usage during the week prior to Thanksgiving spiked by 70 percent when compared to the same time period during 2012.

Apps that were less popular this year were related to business, education, news, travel, health and fitness. It seems that Americans were less likely to do anything work related this year during the holiday weekend and keeping track of calories wasn’t a priority when a giant turkey was on the dining room table. While Thanksgiving is one of the heaviest travel days of the year, people were less likely to use travel apps since travel for the weekend had already been booked. 

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Mike Flacy
By day, I'm the content and social media manager for High-Def Digest, Steve's Digicams and The CheckOut on Ben's Bargains…
How to hide apps on your iPhone
How to Hide Apps on an iPhone.

People either love the iPhone's home screen or hate it. Unlike Android, which hides apps away in an app drawer, the iPhone proudly plops app icons down onto the home screen. This means apps are very easily accessible, but it can also lead to your phone feeling cluttered, especially if you're an app-o-holic. The introduction of the App Library helped this by giving everyone a central place to keep their apps, but for most people, the home screen is still the place to keep apps.

Read more
The best iPhone and Android apps for Black History Month 2024
best iPhone and Android apps for Black History Month.

February is celebrated as Black History Month to honor Black Americans' remarkable achievements and contributions. The theme for this year is "African Americans and the Arts," which shines a light on the impact of African Americans in different artistic fields, such as cultural expression, visual and performing arts, fashion, literature, and more.

In this regard, we present a list of popular iOS and Android apps developed by Black-owned businesses and cover various topics such as finance, entertainment, wellness, and more. These apps run on all the latest smartphones, including the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra and iPhone 15 Pro.
Calendly

Read more
Arc Search is one of the best iPhone apps I’ve ever used
Using Browse for Me feature in Arc Search browser.

It’s 2024, a year when generative AI chatbots are browsing the web for us and presenting answers that are essentially a summarized version of the information hosted on different websites. The approach is convenient and saves us the hassle of visiting multiple ad-ridden, tracker-happy websites to find the required details.

Yes, a wall of information isn’t the most pleasing way to find answers, especially when these AI-generated summaries could result from hallucinated misinformation or sourced from garbage content-farm websites. Thankfully, the likes of Google’s Bard and Microsoft’s Copilot now provide citations, but tests have proved that these summarized answers are still not perfect.

Read more