Broadband Adoption at Home
There was 50% growth in home broadband adoption in the past year, but the torrid growth pace will likely slow.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Former Senior Researcher
John B. Horrigan is a former senior researcher focusing on the internet and technology at Pew Research Center.
There was 50% growth in home broadband adoption in the past year, but the torrid growth pace will likely slow.
John’s presentation provides data on broadband penetration to homes and highlights findings from the report “The Broadband Difference.”
Email has become an increasingly popular and potent tool for political communication in America.
Those who have home broadband connections use the Internet differently from those who have dial-up connections. Broadband users spend more time online, do more things, and do them more often than dial-up Internet users.
As Americans gain experience online, they use the Internet more for their jobs, to make more online purchases and carry out other financial transactions, and to write emails with more significant and intimate content.
The online world is a vibrant social universe where many Internet users enjoy serious and satisfying contact with online communities.
This paper looks at five U.S. cities (Austin, Cleveland, Nashville, Portland, and Washington, DC) and explores strategies being employed by community activists and local governments to create and sustain community networking projects.
Most Americans attribute dot-com difficulties to overeager investors looking for quick payoffs and to the poor business plans of dot-com entrepreneurs.
Americans take advantage of the Internet while executing their holiday plans—from online shopping, and sending of e-greetings, to travel, party and event planning.
This report looks at how new Internet users behave online at two points along the Internet’s diffusion curve, one in November 1998 and the other in March 2000.
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