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Media Mention
Richard J. Dalton Jr. , Newsday
Dec 23, 2003
E-commerce "transactions are the fastest growing activities online," said Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project. "When people take the plunge and give their credit card to a Web site ... that is an enormous vote of confiden...
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More in: Shopping, Search, Work, Religion, Politics, News, Music, Health, Government, Education, Gaming, Banking, Generations, Race and Ethnicity , Women and Men, Email
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Report
Dec 22, 2003Mary Madden, Lee Rainie
This report analyzes the responses of more than 64,000
Americans to phone surveys in the past three years. It finds that 63% of
U.S. adults now are online and many of them have built Internet use into their lives in practical ways.
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More in: Generations, Race and Ethnicity , Women and Men, Email, Banking, Government, Health, Music, News, Politics, Religion, Shopping
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Report
Nov 23, 2003John Horrigan
Computers and the Internet are encroaching on the TV and the landline telephone as important information and communication tools for a growing number of tech-loving Americans, especially those in their twenties.
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More in: Broadband, Generations, Digital Divide, Mobile
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Media Mention
Carl Bialik, Wall Street Journal
Sep 3, 2003
According to a study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, Internet usage is rising steadily among adults across the US, but Southern states continue to lag behind the rest of the country; in December 2002, the proportion of Americans 18 and o...
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More in: Digital Divide, Generations, Race and Ethnicity , Women and Men
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Media Mention
Stanley Miller, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Sep 2, 2003
The region-by-region study released last week by the Pew Internet & American Life Project also found that people online in the upper Midwest -- which it defined as Wisconsin, Minnesota and North and South Dakota -- are more educated than the national...
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More in: Digital Divide, Generations, Race and Ethnicity , Women and Men
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Media Mention
Ellen McCarthy, The Washington Post
Aug 28, 2003
African Americans make up a higher proportion of Internet users in the Washington area than in any other part of the country, according to a new study by the Pew Internet and American Life Project.
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More in: Digital Divide, Race and Ethnicity , Generations, Women and Men
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Media Mention
Greg Griffin, The Denver Post
Aug 28, 2003
Just 33 percent of blacks in the region who responded to a survey by the Pew Internet & American Life Project said they use the Web.
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More in: Digital Divide, Race and Ethnicity , Generations
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Report
Aug 27, 2003Tom Spooner
Internet penetration is not spread evenly over all regions, and users in different regions do different things online.
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More in: Digital Divide, Generations, Race and Ethnicity , Women and Men