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Report
Oct 5, 2005Susannah Fox
There are clear differences among those with broadband connections, dial-up connections, and no connections at all to the internet.
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More in: Digital Divide, Broadband
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Presentation
Sep 24, 2005John Horrigan
This presentation shows recent trends in home broadband adoption and shows why the growth rates of the recent past are not likely to continue. The pool of remaining dial-up users are older, lower income, and less engaged with the internet than dia...
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More in: Broadband
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Report
Sep 21, 2005John Horrigan
The growth in home high-speed internet adoption, after growing quickly in the past several years, has slowed down and is poised to slow even further.
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More in: Broadband
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Presentation
May 25, 2005John Horrigan
How Americans get in touch with government and how the advent of high-speed home internet adoption will effect government-citizen interactions.
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More in: Government, Broadband
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Presentation
Apr 1, 2005John Horrigan
This presentation shows pattern of online news consumption, with particular emphasis on how high-speed internet connections help shift the center of news consumption closer to the online world, especially for young internet users.
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More in: News, Broadband, New Media Ecology
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Presentation
Feb 10, 2005John Horrigan
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More in: Broadband
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Report
Jan 25, 2005Lee Rainie, John Horrigan
Widespread adoption of the internet in the past decade has had some dramatic impacts on people's communication patterns and the way they seek information.
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More in: Broadband, Technology User Types, New Media Ecology, Communities
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Presentation
Oct 27, 2004John Horrigan
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.
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More in: Broadband, Digital Divide
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Report
Jun 27, 2004John Horrigan, Alan Hepner
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 servi...
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More in: Broadband
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Report
Apr 19, 2004John Horrigan
According to the February 2004 survey of the Pew Internet & American Life Project, 55% of American Internet users have access to broadband either at home or in the workplace. Fully 39% of U.S. online users have broadband access at home.
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More in: Broadband