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The image is a bar chart depicting telephone calls in Finland from 1995 to 2004, categorized by local-landline (light blue), national and international-landline (orange), and mobiles (purple). In 1995, local-landline calls were approximately 12,000 million minutes, national and international-landline calls were about 4,000 million minutes, and mobiles were around 500 million minutes. By 2004, local-landline calls decreased to around 10,500 million minutes, national and international-landline calls remained consistent at 4,000 million minutes, and mobiles increased to nearly 8,000 million minutes. Each year shows a similar trend with local-landline calls gradually decreasing, national and international-landline calls remaining steady, and mobiles significantly increasing.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The bar chart depicts the total duration of telephone calls in Finland from 1995 to 2004, categorized into local landline, national and international landline, and mobile calls.
Local landline calls were predominant, peaking at nearly 17 billion minutes in 2001 before declining to approximately 12 billion minutes by 2004. National and international landline calls exhibited a steady rise from about 6 billion minutes in 1995 to around 10 billion minutes in 2004. Mobile calls experienced significant growth, increasing from roughly 2 billion minutes in 1995 to nearly 12 billion minutes by 2004, approaching the usage levels of local landline calls.
In summary, while local landline calls were initially dominant, mobile calls saw substantial growth, nearly matching local landline usage by 2004, and national and international landline calls showed consistent growth throughout the period.
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