Search and Email Remain the Top Online Activities
A May 2011 Pew Internet Project surveys finds that search and email remain the two online activities that are nearly universal among adult internet users, as 92% of online adults use search engines to find information on the Web, and the same number (92%) use email.
Since the Pew Internet Project began measuring adults’ online activities in the last decade, these two behaviors have consistently ranked as the most popular, even as new platforms, broadband and mobile devices continue to reshape the way Americans use the internet and web. As early as 2002, more than eight in ten online adults were using search engines, and more than nine in ten online adults were emailing.
Perhaps the most significant change over the past decade is that both activities have become more habitual. Today, roughly six in ten online adults engage in each of these activities on a typical day; in 2002, 49% of online adults used email each day, while just 29% used a search engine daily.
The youngest adult internet users, the more educated, and those with higher incomes are more likely to use both search and email when compared with other adults. In the case of the latter, overall email use is comparable across white, African-American and Hispanic online adults, yet email use on any given day is not. White online adults are significantly more likely than both African-American and Hispanic online adults to be email users on a typical day (63% v. 48% v. 53%, respectively).
The full report is available here. (15 page PDF)
Stephen


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