“Where do you find the time to blog?”
This is the question I field the most when the topic of blogging comes up at cocktail parties and BBQs. The answer is embedded in this CNN story: Broadband Internet surfers in North America watch two fewer hours of television per week than do those without Internet access, while those using a dial-up connection watch ...
This is the question I field the most when the topic of blogging comes up at cocktail parties and BBQs. The answer is embedded in this CNN story:
This is the question I field the most when the topic of blogging comes up at cocktail parties and BBQs. The answer is embedded in this CNN story:
Broadband Internet surfers in North America watch two fewer hours of television per week than do those without Internet access, while those using a dial-up connection watch 1.5 fewer hours of TV. The data come from a Forrester Research study released Tuesday that uses what it calls the longest-running survey of its kind, counting nearly 69,000 people in the U.S. and Canada as participants. Broadband Internet users watch just 12 hours of TV per week, compared with 14 hours for those who are offline, according to the study, “The State of Consumers and Technology: Benchmark 2005.”
The Forrester page is of little use for those of us who aren’t Forrester clients, but if you click on the video, you learn an interesting fact: according to their survey, only 2% of households in the United States read a blog once a week. I should note that my lovely wife has a different answer to the title question — “it’s the time he would otherwise have used to pick up his socks.”
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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