Just had a quick look - the "kik" package isn't in even use anymore - the whole thing was just drama theatre from by a messaging app I've never heard of. Despite it having 200 million users. Apparently.
> a messaging app I've never heard of. Despite it having 200 million users. Apparently.
Yeah it's tough for me to keep track of which apps are/aren't significant because I'm not in the loop with every community out there.
I'm guessing the users are distributed among small pockets in a network of people who all know each other -- like how in the 1990s there were pockets of "MSN Messenger" and pockets of "Yahoo Instant Messenger" and pockets of "AOL Instant Messenger" users randomly scattered around various schools. OR like how Orkut grew so precipitously in Brazil.
Or it's a generational thing -- I think there is a certain age group of people in the US who used Yik Yak, another who uses tbh and co, and so on.
I would generally trust Facebook employees to tell me which apps are "real"
/ growing since they have Onavo surveillance and other sources (https://www.wsj.com/articles/facebooks-onavo-gives-social-me...). But aside from those data, I'm not sure how else to keep track of which apps are "real" / big.
In the US Kik has a pretty active userbase; but it's demographics skew older, poorer and more female and more rural. So that might be why you haven't heard of it.
Are you sure? This wasn't my impression and what I'm seeing from a quick Google is pretty different on multiple counts:
"Quite surprisingly, close to 70% of Kik’s users are men. It is most popular among young men between ages 20-24. Vine and Flickr are popular among men too, though their users tend to be a little older: 25-29 and 35-39, respectively. Not so surprisingly, Instagram and Pinterest are more popular among women than men. Women also prefer Facebook Messenger over WhatsApp and Kik"
Yeah it's tough for me to keep track of which apps are/aren't significant because I'm not in the loop with every community out there.
I'm guessing the users are distributed among small pockets in a network of people who all know each other -- like how in the 1990s there were pockets of "MSN Messenger" and pockets of "Yahoo Instant Messenger" and pockets of "AOL Instant Messenger" users randomly scattered around various schools. OR like how Orkut grew so precipitously in Brazil.
Or it's a generational thing -- I think there is a certain age group of people in the US who used Yik Yak, another who uses tbh and co, and so on.
I would generally trust Facebook employees to tell me which apps are "real" / growing since they have Onavo surveillance and other sources (https://www.wsj.com/articles/facebooks-onavo-gives-social-me...). But aside from those data, I'm not sure how else to keep track of which apps are "real" / big.