Grandpa, tell me about the old-timey desktop web.
In April of 2010, Mary Meeker of Morgan Stanley released a report that stated mobile web would overtake desktop internet usage in the next 5 years. This forecast is “technically” on track to happen two years ahead of schedule (probably at the end of 2013). The extraordinary thing is that “mobile” actually overtook the desktop internet over a year ago and we never really noticed.
Here’s what I mean:

If you look at December 2010 you’ll see that time spent on the web was only 4 minutes ahead of the time spent with mobile apps. The interesting bit is that 6% (or 4.2 minutes) of the “web” time was “mobile web.” When this 4 minutes changes columns you end up with 66 minutes on the Desktop web and 70 minutes spent with mobile web and mobile apps. Am I cheating a bit? Sure, but the point is that time spent with mobile had already hit critical mass by the end of 2010 and has been accelerating ever since, which, leads nicely into our next topic, the desktop computer.
Grandma, what’s a desktop computer?
If you don’t already have a tablet buy one.* Tablets are the fastest selling new technology in history and the impact on consumer behavior is transformative. A lot of people spending a lot of time and buying a lot of stuff means that tablets will become a critical point of brand engagement.
*Just don’t do it today, wait until March when the iPad 3 is released, it’ll be so worth it.

But all this tablet love means someone is going to be left lonely. Here’s how much less love tablet owners give to their other gadgets:

As you can see tablets have a significant impact on time spent with other devices in the household but nothing is being neglected more than poor Mr. desktop computer. 3% of tablet owners stop using them completely and 32% use them less then they did before. Simultaneously, sales of new desktop PC’s are being cannibalized by tablet sales. In fact, 2011 was the second worst year for PC sales in history (except for Apple).
What’s the moral of the story? Start thinking about the opportunities for our brands in a post-PC, multi-screen mobile world AND what you’re going to do with all that space that’s about to become available on your desktop. A jellyfish tank perhaps?