The Future of Libraries
The seven questions libraries need to address as they consider future services and their role for their patrons and communities.
The seven questions libraries need to address as they consider future services and their role for their patrons and communities.
Lee Rainie discussed the project’s research about younger Americans and how libraries fit into their lives.
How Americans use digital technology and their implications for religious institutions.
Lee Rainie, director of Pew Internet and co-author of Networked: The New Social Operating System, is scheduled to discuss Pew Internet's new report on public libraries at ALA Midwinter
Lee Rainie will discuss privacy, confidentiality, and the use of data at the 2013 meeting of the Pacific Chapter of the American Association for Public Opinion Research
Lee Rainie shows how the large, loosely knit social circles of networked individuals expand opportunities for learning, problem solving, decision making, and personal interaction.
Lee Rainie presented the latest findings about who has and doesn’t have access to the internet, broadband, and cell phones.
Library patrons and non-patrons: Who they are, what their information needs are, what kind of technology they use, and how libraries can meet the varying needs of their patrons.
what types of services Americans value in their libraries and what additional services they would like their libraries to offer.
Up from 25% last year, more than half of those in households earning $75,000 or more now have tablets. Up from 19% last year, 38% of those in upper-income households now have e-readers.