This post is part of our ReadWriteMobile channel, which is dedicated to helping its community understand the strategic business and technical implications of developing mobile applications. This channel is sponsored by Alcatel-Lucent.
In-app services company Urban Airship recently pushed a wealth of information on mobile device connectivity, or more specifically, something called "connection durability." This metric refers to the average duration of an IP connection, which can be measured by the number of times a device's data connection reconnects throughout the day.
Although its sample isn't clean enough to make statistically supported statements, Urban Airship believes it's still a fascinating look into the life of a mobile device on data networks throughout the world. We agree. For example, why is the Nexus S at the top of the charts for reconnections? Why do devices in China stay so well-connected? And how often does your own device lose a signal, on average?
So what did Urban Airship discover in its analysis? There are 4 main takeaways (click for bigger charts):
Urban Airship's interest in this data is due to its effects on the reliability of background services like sync and messaging, and as a company providing background services, it needs to have a thorough understanding of what's going on in this area.
There are a number of things that can affect low-quality or short-lived connections, the company says. Walking into an elevator, getting on the subway, moving away from windows in a large building or going down into a basement. Also, CDMA devices drop their data connection whenever calls are made. In addition, mobile networks have dead spots, some users run "Task Killer" apps to shut off unneeded connections and some phones drop connections when switching from 3G/EGDE to Wi-Fi.
The company performed its analysis using logs it had collected from devices in the field with a special focus on Android devices running Urban Airship's Helium messaging platform. It should be noted that the sample isn't pure enough to support statistically sound statements about the reliability of any given device, carrier or connection within a country.
You can read about these tests in more detail on the Urban Airship blog.