<p>Most apps are free and even when these come with a price tag, the amount is nominal. Even then, people are not downloading them. Why?<br /><br /></p>.<p>According to a latest report by American internet analytics company comScore, most US smartphone owners download zero apps in a typical month.<br /><br />It may be because people just do not need that many apps.<br /><br />The apps people already have are more than suitable for their needs like Facebook, Google, Twitter, WhatsApp, Yahoo etc.<br /><br />Only about one-third of US smartphone owners download any apps in an average month, with the bulk of those downloading one to three apps.<br /><br />"The top seven percent of smartphone owners account for nearly half of all download activity in a given month, comScore reported.<br /><br />A staggering 42 percent of all app time spent on smartphones occurs on the individual's single most used app.<br /><br />"New apps come and go, especially games, but perhaps breakthrough apps will be increasingly rare," the report added.</p>
<p>Most apps are free and even when these come with a price tag, the amount is nominal. Even then, people are not downloading them. Why?<br /><br /></p>.<p>According to a latest report by American internet analytics company comScore, most US smartphone owners download zero apps in a typical month.<br /><br />It may be because people just do not need that many apps.<br /><br />The apps people already have are more than suitable for their needs like Facebook, Google, Twitter, WhatsApp, Yahoo etc.<br /><br />Only about one-third of US smartphone owners download any apps in an average month, with the bulk of those downloading one to three apps.<br /><br />"The top seven percent of smartphone owners account for nearly half of all download activity in a given month, comScore reported.<br /><br />A staggering 42 percent of all app time spent on smartphones occurs on the individual's single most used app.<br /><br />"New apps come and go, especially games, but perhaps breakthrough apps will be increasingly rare," the report added.</p>