When Steve Jobs unveiled the first iPhone in 2007, no one thought of it as a demographic. But a new study suggests that this smartphone and the devices that followed in its wake may have forever changed not only the technology market but also our habits—and indirectly, our birth rates.
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When Steve Jobs unveiled the first iPhone in 2007, no one thought of it as a demographic. But a new study suggests that this smartphone and the devices that followed in its wake may have forever changed not only the technology market but also our habits—and indirectly, our birth rates.