Broadband: What’s All the Fuss About?
The impacts of high-speed connections extend beyond access to information to active participation in the online commons
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.
The impacts of high-speed connections extend beyond access to information to active participation in the online commons
Grumpy Broadband Users Call into WYPR’s Marc Steiner Show
When you look at the data on Americans without broadband at home, it suggests it will take time to get these holdouts off the digital sidelines.
This presentation contains charts on trends in home broadband adoption, focusing on the 2005 to 2007 timeframe.
47% of adults have high-speed internet connections at home as of early March 2007, up five percentage points from a year earlier.
Pew Internet’s typology of information and communications technology users tells us a lot about how far along we are — or aren’t — in the "information society."
This presentation was made at the OECD’s Workshop entitled: “The economic and social impacts of broadband communications: From ICT measurement to policy implications.”
This presentation addresses the following question: What does user behavior tell us about the right way for information providers to reach people? It does so by examining four propositions about what users value from the internet and online commun…
Some 34% of internet users have logged onto the internet using a wireless connection either around the house, at their workplace, or some place else.
Twice as many Americans used the internet as their primary source of news about the 2006 campaign compared with the most recent mid-term election in 2002.
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