Practice Guide: Collecting Data From Mobile Devices and Their Applications
Are you reading this on your mobile device?
Mobile devices are used every day for business and personal communications by a large quantity of the world’s population. According to GSMA realtime intelligence data,1 more than six billion mobile devices are utilised worldwide.
The number of mobile device models, and the technology related to mobile devices has rapidly grown over the last ten years. The basic functionality of simply calling and texting has long since been surpassed. Today mobile devices can be used to browse the Internet, send and receive emails, create and store documents, install and utilise many different types of messaging or social media applications (apps), and more. A mobile device can effectively be thought of as a portable computer.
Are you reading this on your mobile device?
Mobile devices are used every day for business and personal communications by a large quantity of the world’s population. According to GSMA realtime intelligence data,1 more than six billion mobile devices are utilised worldwide.
The number of mobile device models, and the technology related to mobile devices has rapidly grown over the last ten years. The basic functionality of simply calling and texting has long since been surpassed. Today mobile devices can be used to browse the Internet, send and receive emails, create and store documents, install and utilise many different types of messaging or social media applications (apps), and more. A mobile device can effectively be thought of as a portable computer.