Daily Almanac for
Nov 23, 2009
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Broadband at Home

Survey dateUsers
(in millions)
June 20006
Feb. 200113
Aug. 200116
Dec. 200118
March 200224
Nov. 200228
March 200330
July 200336
Nov. 200339
Feb. 200448
June 200451
Nov. 200460
May 200566
NOTE: Broadband includes cable modems, digital subscriber lines (DSL), and wireless systems.
Source: Pew Internet Project.

Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.

How Internet Access Has ChangedInternet Statistics and ResourcesWhere Americans Use the Internet
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Related content from HighBeam Research on: Broadband at Home

Broadband plans across the land: now that broadband has reached near ubiquity, you may have several types to choose from. These five popular providers could help you make the right connection. (Broadband ISPs). (Computer Shopper)

Wireless broadband shakes up Oz: Australia has become a test bed to rate wireless broadband's chances against 36 and DSL. While growth has been good and the throughput competitive, the biggest challenges for upstarts Unwired and PBA are coverage and cash.(WIRELESS BIZ) (Wireless Asia)

Broadband must get its users up to speed: broadband has the potential to dominate home media delivery, but confusion over the range of products, and the slow pace of local-loop unbundling, are hampering its rise.(Media Analysis) (Marketing Week)

Broadband makes its way into more homes.(forecast) (New Media Age)

Broadband by the numbers: Asia is still the world's biggest broadband market, but the rest of the world is catching up fast. Oh, and DSL still rules.(BROADBAND) (Telecom Asia)

Broadband bottleneck: ironically, the growth of high-speed Internet in Europe has been slow, but the Stanford Research Institute's Joe O'Halloran believes broadband has too much to offer to be dismissed as hype. (Analyst Report). (Television Europe)

Broadband: Bringing Home the Bits. (Information resources: new book and reports for leaders of technological innovation).(Brief Article)(Review) (Research-Technology Management)

Solving the broadband paradox: the technology is ready, but the market is not. Deregulation, not subsidies, will speed adoption. (Broadband Policy). (Issues in Science and Technology)

WHY Broadband Content Matters. (Multichannel News)

Broadband ready for the next phase; Industry seeking reliability, profitability.(overview of broadband industry)(Brief Article) (Crain's Chicago Business)

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