Virtual Tours Proliferate
54 million U.S. internet users have used the internet to take a virtual tour of another locale.
New data on internet use and demographics
Our latest survey finds that more than half of home-internet users have broadband connections, and that there are 80 million e-shoppers, and that 14 million have contributed to charity online.
They’re dreaming of a blue Christmas
A new intersection for politics and consumerism has emerged that aspires to ignite an economic backlash to the 2004 election.
Artists, Musicians and the Internet
Artists and musicians are enthusiastic internet users and they believe the internet helps them make and sell their work.
Surprising, strange, and wonderful data
A compendium of Pew Internet Project findings presented at the 10th Anniversary of the World Wide Web Consortium in Boston on December 1.
Young high-speed users flock to internet for campaign news
Got bandwidth at home? Like politics? If you answer ‘yes’ to these questions, and you’re young, the internet shaped what you learned about the presidential election.
Blogs on blogging
Blogs are emerging as an alternate source of news. Check out some blogs to learn more.
The Internet and Democratic Debate
As wired Americans increasingly go online for political news and commentary, we find that the internet is contributing to a wider awareness of political views during this year’s campaign season.
Use of Online Rating Systems
33 million American internet users have reviewed or rated someone or something as part of an online rating system.
Political Online Advertising Update
DNC Post-debate ads assure that October will be a record month in political online ad spending