Hello all,
Here is a piece on the relative use of mobile telephony by males and
females.  In Norway men also report talking longer, but it is more often
the case that men have their phones use paid for by their employer.  
Rich L. 
After Six Straight Talk Titles for Men, Women Are Closing the Gap 
 
SAN ANTONIO, June 12 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T) has
announced that women are catching up with men in cell phone usage,
according to an annual Father's Day poll commissioned by AT&T. After six
years of men using significantly more minutes than women on average, the
difference this year has narrowed to only five minutes of average talk
time.
According to the survey of approximately 1,000 users, men average 458
minutes of monthly wireless phone usage, and women average 453 minutes.
The largest historical gaps since the survey's inception in 2001 were in
2002, when men averaged 589 minutes and women talked only 394 minutes,
and in 2005, when men averaged 571 minutes and women talked only 424
minutes.
The survey results also indicate that 45 percent of wireless subscribers
use the text-messaging features on their device and 44 percent use the
camera feature; 17 percent of subscribers play games on their wireless
device and 11 percent access wireless e-mail. Women use the gaming,
camera and text-messaging features more frequently, and men use their
device for wireless e-mail and accessing the Internet more frequently
than women.
Overall, both men and women continue to use cell phones more than home
phones on average (455 minutes compared with 394 minutes), a trend that
began in 2005. Women, on average, spend more time on home phones than
men; women talk for 532 minutes compared with only 237 minutes for men.
The survey also reveals that women use wireless phones more than men to
talk with friends and family, but men use their phones more for business
conversations.
"Women are quickly catching up with men in cell phone usage,
illustrating that all consumers enjoy the flexibility and mobility that
wireless phones add as they communicate with friends, family and
business colleagues," said Tim Klein, vice president, AT&T's wireless
unit. "AT&T is aggressively growing its portfolio to become the only
wireless company these men and women will ever need."
The national survey of 1,006 qualified adult wireless user respondents
(50 percent men and 50 percent women) was conducted for AT&T by
International Communications Research in May 2007. The survey has been
conducted since 2001 by using similar methodology and sampling
demographics.
 

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