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Online Searches Climb in Popularity

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Online Searches Climb in Popularity
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The buzz in recent tech news may be all about up-and-coming uses for the Internet like Web 2.0 applications, social networking, and cloud computing, but as it turns out, the real hot property is none other than simple search engines. A new study conducted by the Pew Internet & American Life Project shows that use of search engines has spiked significantly in the last six years [PDF], due in part to broadband adoption.

According to Pew, 49 percent of Internet users now search on a daily basis, while only about 30 percent did back in 2002. E-mail remains the most popular activity on the Web, with 60 percent of users checking it daily, but it has grown more slowly in popularity than search.

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Speed seems to be a major factor in determining how frequently people use search, since Pew found  a strong correlation between broadband subscriptions and search.  Age also seems to be a deterrent, with those aged 65 and older being significantly less likely to search.

Pew conducted it survey in the spring with a sample of 2,251 Internet-using adults.

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