Thank you for registering for Parks Associates. We have sent a verification email to your email address along with your temporary password. Please verify your email address via the link in this email as soon as possible. The link expires in 60 minutes.
According to a new study, most people who have access to Apple's Siri voice assistant think she's just fine -- they just don't want her around all that much.
As part of its quarterly "Market Focus" report, Parks Associates today said that in a polling of 482 iPhone 4S owners in the U.S., more than 50 percent of respondents said they were "very satisfied" with Siri. About a fifth of the group said that they were simply "satisfied," and some 9 percent said they were "unsatisfied."
According to the Wall Street Journal, which reported on the findings earlier today, 87 percent of those polled said they use the feature at least once a month, with about a third saying they use it on a daily basis.
From the article, "Siri is just all right with most iPhone users" by Josh Lowensohn
The companies behind the growing Internet of Things may have to do a little consumer massaging (and messaging) to allay some deep concerns before their products can reach heavy adoption. Nearly...
In another study, by Parks Associates, a quarter of consumers were found to be using mobile commerce apps to help with in-store purchase decisions. In that study, the top categories for mobile shop...
In RTB, scale also means having the power to process data at rapid speed. From the time a request comes in, each bidder has 100 milliseconds to respond. In that time, a bidder has to locate the use...
Tablet users are more active in the evening, with 63% of tablet ad requests coming after 2 p.m. Smartphones click more often from midnight through the morning, according to Adfonic. The findings su...
© 2023-2025 Parks Associates. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy
Design & Developed By Agency Partner Interactive
We use cookies in this website to give you the best experience on our site and show you relevant ads. To find out more, read our privacy policy and cookie policy .