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Presentation
Jan 14, 2009Lee Rainie
This speech pulls together Pew Internet Project data about how people's use of the internet and cell phones has fundamentally changed the "information ecosystem" in 10 ways.
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More in: Libraries, New Media Ecology
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Report
Dec 30, 2008Aaron Smith
Voters expect that the level of public engagement they experienced with Barack Obama during the campaign, much of it occurring online, will continue into the early period of his new administration.
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More in: Politics, Government, New Media Ecology
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Report
Dec 14, 2008Lee Rainie, Janna Anderson
A survey of experts shows they expect major tech advances as the phone becomes a primary device for online access, voice-recognition improves, and the structure of the Internet itself improves. They disagree about whether this will lead to more s...
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More in: Future of the Internet, New Media Ecology
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Infographic
Dec 4, 2008
A survey of internet leaders, activists and analysts shows they expect major tech advances as the phone becomes a primary device for online access, voice-recognition improves, artificial and virtual reality become more embedded in everyday life.
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More in: Future of the Internet, New Media Ecology
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Presentation
Oct 27, 2008Susannah Fox
The internet has changed people's expectations of their relationship with health professionals. One possible next step is the concept of participatory medicine.
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More in: Health, Web 2.0, New Media Ecology
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Report
Oct 19, 2008Barry Wellman, Aaron Smith, Amy Wells, Tracy Kennedy
The internet and cell phones have become central components of modern family life. Among all household types, the traditional nuclear family has the highest rate of technology usage and ownership.
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More in: Families, Mobile, New Media Ecology
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Presentation
Aug 22, 2008John Horrigan
Follow the link below to the text of John Horrigan's keynote speech to the Progress & Freedom Foundation's Aspen Summit. The Summit's theme was "unlocking innovation" and the speech talks about what user behavior tells us about the current climat...
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More in: Mobile, New Media Ecology
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Report
Jul 2, 2008John Horrigan
Some 55% of all adult Americans now have a high-speed internet connection
at home. The percentage of Americans with broadband at home has grown from 47% in early 2007.
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More in: Broadband, Digital Divide, New Media Ecology
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Presentation
Jun 10, 2008Susannah Fox, Mary Madden
In this presentation, Mary Madden and Susannah Fox discuss the rise of participatory medicine within the context of key internet demographics and emerging online trends.
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More in: Health, Web 2.0, New Media Ecology
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Report
Apr 24, 2008Amanda Lenhart, Sousan Arafeh, Aaron Smith, Alexandra Macgill
Teens write a lot, but they do not think of their emails, instant and text messages as writing. But teens also believe good writing is essential for success and that more school writing instruction would help them.
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More in: Education, Teens, Email, New Media Ecology