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Report
Sep 14, 2010Kristen Purcell, Roger Entner, Nichole Henderson
35% of U.S. adults have cell phones with apps, but only 24% of adults actually use them. Apps users are younger, more educated, and more affluent than other cell phone users.
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More in: Mobile
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Media Mention
Chris Kenneally, Beyond the Book
Sep 14, 2010
Pew Internet director Lee Rainie spoke with Christopher Kenneally, host of CCC’s Beyond the Book podcast, on the occasion of the publication of a groundbreaking survey, “The Rise of Apps Culture.”
“The rise of mobile connectivity and its meaning t...
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More in: Mobile, Politics
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Media Mention
Suzanne Choney, msnbc.com
Sep 14, 2010
Thirty-five percent of adults in the United States have "apps," or software programs on their cell phones now, but only 24 percent of them are actually using them; 11 percent of cell owners "are not sure if their phone is equipped with apps," accordi...
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Media Mention
David Sarno, Los Angeles Times
Sep 14, 2010
Nearly one quarter of U.S. adults are now using cellphone apps, according to a survey by the Pew Internet Project released Tuesday.
The popularity of apps has grown substantially since the advent of what Pew calls "apps culture," which can be trac...
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Media Mention
David Lieberman, USA Today
Sep 14, 2010
Cell phone apps may be endlessly fascinating to those of us here in Planet Tech. But in the real world -- not so much.
About one-in-three adults has a cell phone with apps, The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project and The Nielsen...
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More in: Mobile
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Commentary
Sep 13, 2010Susannah Fox
What will happen when the untapped knowledge of every patient, of every caregiver, of everyone who has something of value to share actually has the opportunity to share it?
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More in: Health, Mobile, Digital Divide, Web 2.0, Social Networking
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Presentation
Sep 13, 2010Susannah Fox
Susannah Fox will discuss the social life of health information and its potential for transforming health care.
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More in: Health, Mobile
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Media Mention
Jennifer Ludden, NPR's Talk of the Nation
Sep 8, 2010
A full transcript and downloadable audio of this segment are available here.
Grounding once meant being confined to the house or handing over the car keys. But isolating a teen to reflect on his misbehavior is harder in the age of Facebook and ce...
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More in: Families, Teens, Mobile
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Media Mention
Donna St. George, Washington Post
Sep 6, 2010
Not so long ago, teenagers in trouble got grounded. They lost their evenings out, maybe the keys to the family car. But lately the art of family discipline has begun to reflect our digital age.
Now parents seize cellphones, shut down Facebook page...
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More in: Mobile, Families, Teens
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Report
Sep 2, 2010Amanda Lenhart
Adults make just as many calls, but text less often than teens. Americans say their mobile phones make them feel safer and more connected, but are irritated by cell intrusions and rudeness by other users.
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More in: Mobile, Teens