IMPORTANT NOTE: This list does NOT provide the "number of mobile phones in use." Nobody knows that data. This is a count of... 5 2013/07 [6][10] 7 Pakistan 194,580,369 219,922,083 88.34...
5 days in Pakistan, 2 hours in the United States, as quickly as 20 minutes in the Republic of... For instance, in Portugal, any call to a ported mobile number is accompanied by an...
is a list of the world's thirty largest terrestrial mobile phone network operators measured by number of subscriptions. Rank Country Company Main markets Technology Total subscriptions (in...
Call Log History of a Mobile Number: Speed bump to track sim location in Pakistan or to get call log history of a mobile number in Pakistan is one elementary protection technique is called...
A New York driver using two hand-held mobile phones at once while in a traffic jam Mobile... Due to the number of crashes that are related to conducting calls on a phone and texting while...
on track to return as prime minister in Pakistan’s next... many in Pakistan as a national hero for leading the country’... Minister in Punjab, they listed the number of people he had...
International mobile subscriber identity (IMSI) number, which is stored on a SIM card that can, in theory, be transferred to... India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Cambodia, Thailand, Iran, Nigeria...
Almost every app owner I meet starts the conversation by asking, “What are the most important mobile app metrics to track for my app?” DAU/MAU, CPA, LTV, APRU, ARPPU… formulas and acronyms get confusing fast. What’s the best way to track your app’s performance? And how do you know if your numbers are awesome or abysmal? Mobile app analytics don’t have to be complicated. It all boils down to monitoring the proper mobile application usage metrics. In this post, I’ll cover 7 of the most critical mobile app engagement metrics you shou ...
Reforms in Pakistan (IMF)1 promulgated a new income tax law. The new law repealed the time... They also note that the 2001 ordinance required a large number of revisions to make it work but...
Pakistan’s elections on 8 February were meant to bring stability to the country after almost two years of turmoil but the fraudulent nature of the polls has deepened political divisions. It will also bring more instability to a nuclear-armed, 240-million-strong country already shaky at best in a critically important geostrategic region. In the months leading up to the long-awaited elections, the judiciary and the military pursued a dual-track strategy: ensure that the highly popular former prime minister, Imran Khan, is never able to run for ...