Mobile data will rise 26 times to use for 2015, including a video recording and viewing capabilities to more mainstream smartphones and tablet devices, Cisco. The San Jose, Calif.-based networking company predicts that 7.1 billion phones, tablets.

And other mobile devices on the Internet around the world by 2015 – almost as much equipment as the 7.2 billion people in the world by then. People send data 26 times more mobile than they do now, which means 6.3 exabytes per month. An exabyte is one billion gigabytes.
“This is the equivalent of every man, woman and child on Earth 1000 SMS messages sent per second,” said Suraj Shetty, Cisco’s vice president of global marketing services.
Cisco also predicted that 56 percent of mobile data traffic will still come laptops and netbooks. Smartphones will change for about 27 percent and tablets only about 3.5 percent.
Two thirds of the growth is attributed to increasing amounts of videos from mobile devices. This year the video will make up the largest segment of Internet traffic to mobile devices. The media is becoming increasingly popular as companies such as Netflix to deliver more movies online, more people are watching videos on Youtube and Google more tablets and mobile video telephony.
The large increase in data traffic only on recent trends in network traffic. Last year, the amount of data sent mobile 2.6-fold, making it one year ago. Mobile traffic in 2010 was three times as large as the combined worldwide Internet traffic in 2000.
Cisco study aims to grow its customers, including AT & T Inc. and Verizon a glance how the traffic is and how they adapt their bandwidth usage and customer demand.

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