Advertisement

Half of US adults own tablet or smartphone

Americans' news habits are on the move as half of all adults now own either a tablet computer or a smartphone, and one-third use their mobile devices to view news stories and video clips at least once a week.

That's according to a survey by the Pew Research Centre's Project for Excellence in Journalism, which polled more than 9500 adults from late June to early August.

The findings have "major implications for how news will be consumed and paid for", says Pew.

About 20 per cent of the mobile news users surveyed said they paid for an online subscription in the last year.

But mobile viewing doesn't necessarily mean that people are cutting back on viewing news on PCs or in newspapers. About half of the tablet news users that Pew surveyed say their tablets spur them to spend more time consuming news, and about one-third say they get news from new sources they didn't use before.

Nearly one-third of the mobile users also have print-only subscriptions, and most have no plans to give them up.

Devices based on Google's Android platform are gaining momentum. Pew found that just over half of tablet owners reported owning Apple's iPad, compared with 81 per cent a year ago. Forty-eight per cent now own an Android-based device, including Amazon.com's Kindle Fire.