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May 13, 2008
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Technology & Media Use

Broadband Adoption in the United States: Growing but Slowing

9/21/2005 | MemoReport  | John Horrigan

The report argues that, while broadband adoption has grown quickly in recent years, there are reasons to believe that it is slowing. The report develops a model of broadband adoption that hypothesizes that the intensity of online use is the critical variable in understanding the home high-speed adoption decision and the trajectory of the adoption curve. Using national survey data from 2002 and 2005, the paper shows that the role of online experience in explaining intensity of internet use has vanished over this time frame; the explanatory effect of having a broadband connection has grown. This suggests that relative to 2002 there is not much pent-up demand for high-speed internet use at home.

View PDF of Report

 

Other Technology & Media Use Resources

MemoMemo  | Mobile Access to Data and Information

MemoMemo  | Seeding The Cloud: What Mobile Access Means for Usage Patterns and Online Content

MemoMemo  | Broadband: What's All the Fuss About?

MemoReport  | Online Video

MemoMemo  | Home Broadband Adoption 2007

 

Related Topic Areas

Internet Evolution

Public Policy