Mobile Web Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Mobile Web stocks.

Mobile Web Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Oct 2 TMUS T-Mobile Sells $561 Million Wireless Debt Deal Shelved in August
Oct 2 TMUS Behind the Scenes of T-Mobile US's Latest Options Trends
Oct 2 BABA Alibaba, JD.com lead Chinese tech rally
Oct 2 BABA Ping: Alibaba Outperformance En-Route - Buy
Oct 2 BABA Alibaba, JD Keep Up China Stimulus Rally; PDD Recovers From Earnings Slide
Oct 2 BABA Red-hot Alibaba provides update on buyback program
Oct 2 BABA Are Retail-Wholesale Stocks Lagging Alibaba (BABA) This Year?
Oct 2 BABA What's Going On With Chinese Stocks Alibaba, NIO, XPeng, Li Auto On Wednesday?
Oct 2 BABA Cramer Says 'Hot Money' Flowing From Nvidia, Apple Into China, Focus On Alibaba 'If You Must'
Oct 2 TMUS Virginia Commonwealth University Taps T-Mobile to Help Protect Endangered Species
Oct 2 BABA Stocks to Watch Wednesday: Nike, Humana, Alibaba, Occidental
Oct 2 BABA Billionaire Investor David Tepper Just Said to Buy "Everything" in China. Here Are His 3 Largest Positions.
Oct 2 BABA China and Middle East tensions push commodities into the spotlight: Morning Brief
Oct 2 BABA Trending tickers: Nike, Apple, Tesla, Alibaba and JD Sports
Oct 2 BABA China Is Looking Like a Hot Investment Again. Look Before You Leap In.
Oct 2 BABA Tesla, Amazon, Nike, Walmart, Alibaba: Why These 5 Stocks Are On Investors' Radars Today
Oct 2 BABA Alibaba Call Options Update: It's Time To Sell Puts After The Rally
Oct 1 BABA JD.com Stock: Consider an Investment in Formerly Uninvestable China
Oct 1 TMUS Dish sale funds EchoStar in near term to develop business: CEO
Oct 1 TMUS Zeta Global's AI Cloud: Your Secret Weapon for Massive Growth
Mobile Web

The mobile web refers to browser-based World Wide Web services accessed from handheld mobile devices, such as smartphones or feature phones, through a mobile or other wireless network.
Traditionally, the World Wide Web has been accessed via fixed-line services on laptops and desktop computers. However, the web is now more accessible by portable and wireless devices. Early 2010 ITU (International Telecommunication Union) report said that with current growth rates, web access by people on the go – via laptops and smart mobile devices – is likely to exceed web access from desktop computers within the next five years. In January 2014, mobile internet use exceeded desktop use in the United States. The shift to mobile Web access has accelerated since 2007 with the rise of larger multitouch smartphones, and since 2010 with the rise of multitouch tablet computers. Both platforms provide better Internet access, screens, and mobile browsers, or application-based user Web experiences than previous generations of mobile devices. Web designers may work separately on such pages, or pages may be automatically converted, as in Mobile Wikipedia. Faster speeds, smaller, feature-rich devices, and a multitude of applications continue to drive explosive growth for mobile internet traffic. The 2017 Virtual Network Index (VNI) report produced by Cisco Systems forecasts that by 2021, there will be 5.5 billion global mobile users (up from 4.9 billion in 2016). Additionally, the same 2017 VNI report forecasts that average access speeds will increase by roughly three times from 6.8 Mbit/s to 20 Mbit/s in that same period with video comprising the bulk of the traffic (78%).
The distinction between mobile web applications and native applications is anticipated to become increasingly blurred, as mobile browsers gain direct access to the hardware of mobile devices (including accelerometers and GPS chips), and the speed and abilities of browser-based applications improve. Persistent storage and access to sophisticated user interface graphics functions may further reduce the need for the development of platform-specific native applications.
The mobile web has also been called Web 3.0, drawing parallels to the changes users were experiencing as Web 2.0 websites proliferated.

The mobile web was first popularized by the silicon valley company, Unwired Planet. In 1997, Unwired Planet, Nokia, Ericsson, and Motorola started the WAP Forum to create and harmonize the standards to ease the transition to bandwidth networks and small display devices. The WAP standard was built on a three-layer, middleware architecture that fueled the early growth of the mobile web but was made virtually irrelevant with faster networks, larger displays, and advanced smartphones based on Apple's iOS and Google's Android software.

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