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When any technology gadget has two colors one of the first questions that is always asked: "Is one color for men and the other for women?" The simple answer when it comes to the white iPhone 4 vs. the Black iPhone 4 is NO. In fact, many discussion boards and websites have looked in to this very thing. Although there is no hard evidence coming from Apple it seems that iPhone color is chosen more based on individual taste than gender specific guidelines.<br><br>There was a questionnaire on Macforum.com that asked iPhone users to state what color iPhone they have and what their gender was. The questionnaire had some surprising results.<br><br><br>Male with Black iPhone: 106 people or 53.54%<br><br>Male with White iPhone: 72 people or 36.36%<br><br>Female with Black iPhone: 10 people or 5.05%<br><br>Female with White iPhone: 10 people or 5.05%<br><br><br>Although this survey is not scientific by any means, it does give us some insight. Men were more likely to have a black iPhone than a white iPhone but women were just as likely to have either (although this is from a significantly smaller sample size). Surveys on other websites returned much the same results but in most cases even women chose the black iPhone over the white iPhone. When asked which color iPhone 4 do you want the results were still consistent.<br><br>The bottom line is that both men and women actually prefer the black iPhone the white. With the iPhone 3G and 3Gs both white and black models were offered and the black constantly out sold the white. The same is true for Google searches when a new iPhone is going to be released. Early on, when both the black and white iPhone 4s were going to be released, average monthly Google searches for black iPhone 4 far outpaced that for white iPhone 4. Black iPhone 4 had 2,900 searches while the white iPhone 4 had 10% of that at 260. Across the board, both male and female, black iPhones are more popular than their white brethren. The fact that seems to get lost most is that these are white and black iPhones not pink and black iPhones. If that were the case there would probably be a much more pronounced gender preference.<br><br>When you have any kind of concerns regarding exactly where and also the way to work with bubble shooter pet, you possibly can email us from our site. When multiple people were asked which color iPhone they wanted the answers were never uniform based on gender:<br><br>"I'm going to get the white iPhone 4 because it has a clean look to it and I hear finger smudges won't show up as much." -Trent Pirillo<br><br>"I like the black iPhone 4 for its slick design. The chrome looks much better on black than it does on white." -Julie Hodge<br><br>"I have the black one because it is already out and I don't have to wait for it. I don't care about the color because I put a cover on my iPhone anyways." -Paul Bowman<br><br>It is hard to tell whether the iPhone color is a gender thing. From interviews and online surveys it does not seem that gender has anything to do with the color iPhone that a person picks. What is very apparent is that the majority of people like the black iPhone over the white iPhone. When "The White" does finally come out it would be interesting for Apple to release gender specific statistics. Give a choice which would you choose?
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bubble shooter pet https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pandakidgame.bubbleshooterpetraccoon. Lara O'Reilly/Business Insider <br><br>Jonah Peretti is the CEO and founder of BuzzFeed, a digital media company that reaches hundreds of millions of readers around the world with its fun quizzes and videos, as well as with hard-hitting news coverage. <br><br>Before starting BuzzFeed, Peretti launched The Huffington Post along with Ariana Huffington, Ken Lerer and the late conservative firebrand, Andrew Breitbart.  <br><br>Peretti recently spoke with Business Insider's US Editor-in-Chief, Alyson Shontell, for the podcast "Success! How I Did It." <br><br>In this episode, we cover: <br><br><br>Jonah's first experience with viral fame, after an email thread between him and Nike exploded.<br><br>How he first met Arianna Huffington, who invited him to her home and cooked him breakfast. <br><br>What Andrew Breitbart — another Huffington Post founder — was like, and what he might think of his namesake website today. <br><br>Buzzfeed's early days as an instant messaging bot. <br><br>The reason he resisted the urge to sell BuzzFeed after receiving a huge buyout offer from Disney.  <br><br>Why company executives who seem intregral might not be as essential as you think. <br><br>That famous lewd Ivanka Trump tweet, and why he published it. <br><br>Why Buzzfeed decided to publish the Trump-Russia dossier. <br><br>How to build a successful startup, and turn it into something massive.  <br>The following transcript has been edited for clarity and length.

Revision as of 19:59, 16 November 2017

bubble shooter pet https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pandakidgame.bubbleshooterpetraccoon. Lara O'Reilly/Business Insider

Jonah Peretti is the CEO and founder of BuzzFeed, a digital media company that reaches hundreds of millions of readers around the world with its fun quizzes and videos, as well as with hard-hitting news coverage.

Before starting BuzzFeed, Peretti launched The Huffington Post along with Ariana Huffington, Ken Lerer and the late conservative firebrand, Andrew Breitbart. 

Peretti recently spoke with Business Insider's US Editor-in-Chief, Alyson Shontell, for the podcast "Success! How I Did It."

In this episode, we cover: 


Jonah's first experience with viral fame, after an email thread between him and Nike exploded.

How he first met Arianna Huffington, who invited him to her home and cooked him breakfast. 

What Andrew Breitbart — another Huffington Post founder — was like, and what he might think of his namesake website today.

Buzzfeed's early days as an instant messaging bot. 

The reason he resisted the urge to sell BuzzFeed after receiving a huge buyout offer from Disney. 

Why company executives who seem intregral might not be as essential as you think. 

That famous lewd Ivanka Trump tweet, and why he published it. 

Why Buzzfeed decided to publish the Trump-Russia dossier. 

How to build a successful startup, and turn it into something massive.  
The following transcript has been edited for clarity and length.