Seeding The Cloud: What Mobile Access Means for Usage Patterns and Online Content
Groups that have trailed in “traditional” internet access are in a better position to shape cyberspace as wireless devices make it more accessible.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
62% of Americans are part of a wireless, mobile population that participates in digital activities away from home or work
The workshop on broadband metrics that is discussed here was held in June 2006, and in light of recent events, was either prescient or instrumental in helping to mobilize wider support for improving the state of our collective public knowledge of broadband networks. In May 2007, Commerce Committee Chairman Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii), with a number […]
This data set contains questions about usage of, and attitudes towards, information and communications technologies. It served as the basis for “The Mobile Difference” typology report, and was also used in the reports “When Technology Fails” and “Mobile Access to Data and Information”.
Sites Studied Joe Biden (D) http://www.joebiden.com/home Sam Brownback (R) http://www.brownback.com/s Hillary Clinton (D) http://www.hillaryclinton.com/?splash=1 John Cox (R) http://www.cox2008.com/cox/ Christopher Dodd (R) http://www.chrisdodd.com/home John Edwards (D) http://johnedwards.com/ James Gilmore (R) http://www.gilmoreforpresident.com/index.php Rudolph Giuliani (R) http://www.joinrudy2008.com/ Mike Gravel (D) http://www.gravel2008.us/ Mike Huckabee (R) http://www.explorehuckabee.com/ Duncan Hunter (R) http://www.gohunter08.com/ Dennis Kucinich (D) http://kucinich.us/ John McCain (R) http://johnmccain.com/ Barack […]
Experts have long anticipated the mainstreaming of online video. “The really interesting highway applications will grow out of the participation of tens or hundreds or millions of people, who will not just consume entertainment and other information, but will create it, too. Until millions of people are communicating with one another, exploring subjects of common […]
Half of all American adults are only occasional users of modern information gadgetry, while 8% are avid participants in all that digital life has to offer