The line graphs illustrate the number of subscriptions to mobile and fixed phone lines in Eritrea, India, the UK, and Uruguay during a ten-year period from 2005 to 2015.
Overall, initially, the British showed the highest registrations for cellphones, while at the end it was Uruguay. With regards to fixed line registrations, the UK consistently accounted for the highest. Furthermore, the fewest cellphone and fixed phone subscriptions were recorded from Eritrea throughout the time given.
At the beginning, in Uruguay, nearly 40 people began to use cellphones, then the figure rose drastically to peak at approximately 160 in 2013, before slightly falling to under 150 at the end. Likewise, in India, the cellphone utilization was nearly nonexistent at first, but it increased considerably, up to a little over 90 in 2015. The purchasing of mobile phones by the British fluctuated around 110 throughout the decade. Similarly, the cellphone subscriptions of Eritrea were leveled off from the beginning to end at around 10.
Fixed lines were equally popular in the UK from 2005 to 2015, which depicts only a slight reduction to 40 from around 60. Moreover, the Uruguay fixed line subscriptions were around 30 throughout the ten-year period. However, the fixed phone usage in Eritrea and India was comparatively negligible.
