by John Kirk ??|?? June 20th, 2013
Disraeli is reputed to have said that there were three kinds of lies: Lies, damned lies, and statistics.
?Lies, damned lies, and statistics? is a phrase describing the persuasive power of numbers, particularly the use of statistics to bolster weak arguments. ~ Wikipedia
Comparing the market share of Android phones to the market share of iPhones is a damned statistical lie and it should never be done. Here?s why.
Venn Diagrams
If you drew a Venn diagram of ?all iPhones? and ?all iPhones that ran iOS?, they would be one and the same. Here is another example of such an overlapping Venn Diagram:
Source: thehighdefinite
? If you replace ?Male friends who joke about having sex with you? with the words ?all iPhones?; and
? If you replace ?Men who would have sex with you if you showed the slightest interest? with the words ?all iPhones that ran iOS??
?you would ruin a perfectly good joke. But you would also have a Venn diagram that accurately represented the overlap between ?iPhones? and ?iPhones that run on the iOS operating system.? All iPhones run on iOS. But the opposite is not true. iOS is more than just iPhones.
On the other hand, Android phones are made by many manufacturers. About 40% are made by Samsung and the other 60% are made by Motorola, Sony, HTC and a variety of different hardware manufacturers. Why then do we lump all Android phones together and count them as one?
The only legitimate reason to group all Android phones together is in order to suggest a causal relationship between the number of Android phones and the strength of the Android platform. But is there such a relationship?
Comparing Android?s phone activation numbers to the iPhone?s sales numbers is akin to comparing fish to whales and concluding that fish outnumber mammals.
The Folly Inherent In Comparing Android Phones to iPhones Instead Of Comparing Android To iOS
Comparing Android?s phone activation numbers to the iPhone?s sales numbers ? and concluding that Android outnumbers iOS ? is akin to comparing fish to whales and concluding that fish outnumber mammals.
Fish MAY outnumber mammals, but not nearly by the margin that fish outnumber whales. And Android devices do outnumber iOS devices but not nearly by the margin that Android phones outnumber iPhones. When making comparisons, one needs to compare like to like, otherwise, it skews the results.
There have been over 900 million Android devices activated and over 600 million iOS devices sold. And ? if Flurry?s clientele is representative ? the total number of active Android devices may only exceed the total number of active iOS devices by little more than 10% (see chart, below).
Source: Flurry
Comparing an operating system to an operating system; comparing all active devices to all active devices; comparing like to like; ? now THAT is the proper basis for a comparison.
You do not compare an entire class of things to a subset of another class, and you do not compare phones that run the Android operating system to a subset of devices (iPhones) that run on the iOS operating system, otherwise, you are likely to get is a skewed result?
?and a damned lie?
?or (-shudder-) a ?Chart Of The Day.?
Legitimate Reasoning Vs. Bogus Reasoning
There are legitimate reasons to compare fish to whales and there are legitimate reasons to compare Android phones to iPhones.
But if you?re actually trying to compare fish to mammals or the Android operating system to the iOS operating system, such a comparison conceals ? rather than reveals ? the truth. It is deceitful, dishonest, untruthful, false, duplicitous, mendacious; hypocritical, untrustworthy, unscrupulous, unprincipled, two-faced, double-dealing, underhanded, crafty, cunning, sly, scheming, calculating, treacherous, Machiavellian, sneaky, tricky, foxy, crooked, fraudulent, counterfeit, fabricated, invented, concocted, made up, trumped up, untrue, false, bogus, fake, spurious, fallacious, deceptive and misleading.
In other words, it?s a damn lie.
Cyber Monday Deals 2012 Sasha McHale Boy Meets World elizabeth taylor cam newton FedEx Gabriel Aubry
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.