Eustace Tilley Moves On
The New Yorker magazine begins to figure out the internet.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
The New Yorker magazine begins to figure out the internet.
Going back to March 2000 and the dawn of the Pew Internet Project we have posted our survey data and some new data sets are now available.
Justice Kennedy, and other Justices who may do research online for Court opinions, are joined by about 27 million other adult Americans who use the internet to conduct research connected to their jobs.
Despite the rapturous speed with which the news of the newly elected Pope disseminated in digital bits and bytes throughout the world today, the source that first announced the breaking story was the same brick-and-mortar reporter we’ve relied on …
Meetup.com, the favorite web business of political sociologists, announced yesterday that it will institute a fee for its community organizing service beginning May 1.
The presentation is an overview of several trends, including broadband adoption and a surge of interest in “every day” health topics, and how they affect the internet health landscape.
There is a new online cat-and-mouse game between the United States and China, the two internet superpowers.
An overview of findings of the Pew Internet Project with implications for those who run web sites.
Google Maps takes “vanity searches” to a whole new level.
Maybe it was the news of the royal wedding last weekend, or maybe it’s my own personal experience with wedding planning, but I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the role the internet plays in planning, promoting and archiving a major life event …