Broadband Adoption at Home: Trends & Prospects
This presentation presents data through January 2005 on broadband adoption at home and discusses prospects for future growth
This presentation presents data through January 2005 on broadband adoption at home and discusses prospects for future growth
A growing number of "Silver Surfers" switch to fast online connections
Got bandwidth at home? Like politics? If you answer 'yes' to these questions, and you're young, the internet shaped what you learned about the presidential election.
This slide show presents trends from 2002 to 2004 in adoption of high-speed internet connections at home among Americans living in rural parts of the country.
While telephone calling using Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) has attracted considerable attention in the business community and among policymakers, 27% of Internet users in the United States – or 17% of all Americans – have heard of the service....
According to a March 2004 survey by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, 28% of Americans - and fully 41% of all Internet users - have within the past month used a laptop that can connect wirelessly to the Internet or a cell phone that lets t...
The presentation provides data on Internet usage for African American and Hispanic individuals.
The major portals of Web traffic played a late, mild, yet remarkably sophisticated role in the proceedings. Some 22% of Internet users searched the Internet for campaign news during the 2002 mid-term election, but they were somewhat less successfu...
More than 53 million American adults have used the Internet to publish their thoughts, respond to others, post pictures, share files and otherwise contribute to the explosion of content available online.
This presentation summarizes data from the report: “Cable and Internet Loom Large in Fragmented Political News Universe” and was done in conjunction with the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press.