As we head into 2023, AI is definitely the biggest trend we expect to see on the app side, with Meta, Google, and other players readying their chatbots and other AI tools. If OpenAI ever makes ChatGPT available on iOS and Android, expect it to be one of the most popular apps of the next year.

App Data Report 2023Want to learn all about the app industry? Our App Data Report covers revenues, downloads, and number of apps across the Apple App Store and Google Play, alongside the top grossing and most downloaded individual apps.


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TikTok remained the most popular app in the US as well, increasing its downloads in the country for two years in a row. Cash App climbed again in 2022, cementing itself as the most popular finance app in the US.

After two years as the most downloaded app in the UK, the NHS app dropped to fourth, with less people needing it to travel. BeReal was the third most downloaded app in the country, surpassing Instagram in total downloads.

WeChat is the most popular app in China, which acts as a home screen for Chinese phone users. It also has thousands of mini-programs, including some of the most popular apps in the country like JD and Pinduoduo, available through its app.

McDonalds retained its place as the most downloaded food and drink app of 2022, with double the downloads of second place Uber Eats. Grab and Zomato saw some growth, with longer lockdowns in India and South-east Asia finally ending in 2022.

And private messaging and groups platform Telegram was the big winner of 2021, up almost 75 million installs from 256 million last year to 329 million this year. A likely reason for the Telegram increase is the desire for more privacy, as well as a flight from mainstream social networks by people claiming censorship on the part of the likes of Facebook and Twitter.

Retail is always interesting as well, as the most-download apps provide insight into which retailers are winning mobile, and therefore, in large part winning e-Commerce. While Amazon leads in the U.S. with 40 million installs locally, three apps have more global installs than the U.S. retail giant. Shopee with 203 million, SHEIN with 190 million, and Mesh with 153 million all lead Amazon, which captured 148 million global app installs.

While choice of cocktails and other alcoholic beverages is down to personal preference, there are some classic cocktails that have stood the test of time and remain amongst the most popular cocktails ordered in bars around the world today.

As the most ordered cocktail in the world, the classic Margarita has been one of the most popular cocktails in America for years and still remains on top. While there are many variations, the traditional recipe consists of tequila, Triple Sec and lime juice. It's also often served with a salt rim for the perfect balance of sweet, sour and salty.

Made popular in the 90s thanks to the hit TV show Sex and the City, the deliciously sweet Cosmopolitan definitely deserves its place on our list of the world's most popular cocktails! Blending vodka, Cointreau and cranberry juice and traditionally served in a martini glass, the Cosmo is the cocktail of choice for many glamorous individuals.

Created by The Martini Queen of South Beach, Cheryl Cook, in the 1980s, the Cosmo was designed to be aesthetically pleasing to appeal to more women. This modern, classic cocktail is incredibly popular around the world and can be easily adapted by adding a splash of champagne to make it even more glitzy.

When you think of a Daiquiri you may think of clear blue skies over sandy Cuban beaches. While it may seem like it's a cocktail that's best-suited for a tropical holiday, the Daiquiri is actually the most-ordered rum cocktail in pubs and bars across the globe.

This classic, popular cocktail, which remains a Cuban speciality, combines just 3 very simple ingredients, rum, citrus juice and sugar for the fresh flavour we all enjoy. Typically garnished with a lime slice too, the Daiquiri is one of the most well-balanced cocktails around.

The Gimlet is a simple cocktail combining gin and lime to create an ultra-refreshing drink that has stood the test of time and become one of the most popular cocktails around. With its sharp kick, the Gimlet has an unmistakable flavour that's ideal for sipping on during those warm summer evenings

The classic Manhattan cocktail has survived countless trends, outlasted prohibition and is now known as one of the greatest cocktails ever made. I think we can all agree it definitely deserves its spot amongst the world's most popular cocktails! Made with whiskey, sweet vermouth and bitters the Manhattan is the perfect after-dinner tipple.

First mixed in 1870 at the Manhattan Club (who would've guessed?) by Jennie Jerome, the mother of Winston Churchill, the cocktail was a huge hit and has remained just as popular ever since. It's now widely available in bars, cafes and restaurants all over the world and is very highly regarded by both bartenders and patrons alike.

Combining equal parts of gin, vermouth and Campari, the Negroni is an iconic cocktail that will always be in style! Poured over ice and with a slice of orange to garnish, it's easy to see why it's one of the most popular cocktails not only in Italy, but around the world.

The origins of this classic cocktail are a little foggy, with so many people claiming they created it it's difficult to trust anyone! The most common story is that it was invented in the late 1800s. This was when new liqueurs became available to bartenders, resulting in new and improved whiskey cocktails. But, many bar-goers simply ordered a cocktail 'the old fashioned way'. Even today the Old Fashioned has been the number one selling cocktail in many bars. You just can't beat a classic!

Invented by Frank Meier in 1925, the Mimosa was first served at The Ritz Hotel in Paris. Eventually, it was picked up by the British and was loved so much by the royal family that it took the rest of the world by storm. Nowadays, both American and European brunches are incomplete without a Mimosa. The cocktail is so popular there is even a National Mimosa Day to celebrate it (May 16th if you were wondering).

"Happy Birthday to You" is the best-known and most frequently sung song in the world. Many - including Justice Breyer in his dissent in Eldred v. Ashcroft - have portrayed it as an unoriginal work that is hardly worthy of copyright protection, but nonetheless remains under copyright. Yet close historical scrutiny reveals both of those assumptions to be false. The song that became "Happy Birthday to You," originally written with different lyrics as "Good Morning to All," was the product of intense creative labor, undertaken with copyright protection in mind. However, it is almost certainly no longer under copyright, due to a lack of evidence about who wrote the words; defective copyright notice; and a failure to file a proper renewal application. The falsity of the standard story about the song demonstrates the dangers of relying on anecdotes without thorough research and analysis. It also reveals collective action barriers to mounting challenges to copyright validity: the song generates an estimated $2 million per year, and yet no one has ever sought adjudication of the validity of its copyright. Finally, the true story of the song demonstrates that a long, unitary copyright term requires changes in copyright doctrine and administration. With such a term, copyright law needs a doctrine like adverse possession to clear title and protect expectations generated when, as with this song, putative owners do not challenge distribution of unauthorized copies for more than 20 years. And Copyright Office recordkeeping policy, which currently calls for discarding correspondence after 20 years and most registration denials and deposits after five years, must be improved to facilitate resolution of disputes involving older works. Over two hundred unpublished documents found in six archives across the United States have been made available on a website that will serve as an online appendix to this article.

This is a list of the most-played mobile games ordered by their player count, which include reported player data, registered accounts, and/or monthly active users. For non-mobile games, see the list of most-played video games by player count. Mobile games are defined as games that have only been released on mobile operating systems, particularly Android and iOS.[1]

A little more than a week ago, I wrote a review of an art show by the artist and TikTok sensation Devon Rodriguez, best known for live drawing subway riders. He is, by some measures, the most famous artist in the world, with many millions of social media followers. He did not like the review.

In the early 1980s, scientists at Nihon Tokushu Noyaku Seizo in Tokyo, an arm of Bayer, started to play around with nithiazine, an insecticide created in California a decade earlier. They discovered a new compound that was more than 100 times as effective at killing crop pests, such as aphids. Named imidacloprid, the chemical was launched onto the market in the 1990s, and it quickly became one of the most widely used insecticides in the world. By the mid-2000s, imidacloprid and similar compounds made up one-quarter of all insecticides (see 'Rising tide'). The compounds damage insects' nervous systems by causing the nerves to fire continually until they fail, eventually leading to death. Many neonics are applied directly to seeds, and are taken up by growing plants. If the plant flowers, the chemicals find their way into pollen and nectar.

The Chinese were the first to get their kicks by kicking balls into nets for sport in the third century B.C., and the game known globally as football was formalized in England in the 19th century. But the predecessor of most modern ball games can be found in the Americas. (See vintage pictures of soccer players around the world.) 2351a5e196

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