| William A. Katz - 2000 - 176 pagini
...in Internet access. Indeed, at the lowest income levels, those in urban areas are more than twice as likely to have Internet access than those earning the same income in rural areas. The "least connected" groups are the rural poor, rural and central city minorities, households whose members... | |
| Catherine L. Mann, Sue E. Eckert, Sarah Cleeland Knight - 2000 - 242 pagini
...behind in Internet access. Even at the lowest income levels, those in urban areas are more than twice as likely to have Internet access than those earning the same income in rural areas; • educated households are far more likely to be connected to the Internet. The divide in access between... | |
| B. G. Kutais - 1999 - 262 pagini
...Through The Net report. Indeed, at the lowest income levels, those in urban areas are more than twice as likely to have Internet access than those earning the same income in rural areas. Community access centers, such as schools, libraries, and other public centers are particularly well... | |
| Jae Young Kim, Chae-yŏng Kim - 2002 - 212 pagini
...in Internet access. Indeed, at the lowest income levels, those in urban areas are more than twice as likely to have Internet access than those earning the same income in rural areas. Even for some groups, the disparity has widened as the information haves outpace the have-nots in gaining... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Science. Subcommittee on Research - 2003 - 176 pagini
...were lagging behind in computer and Internet access. At some income levels, those in urban areas were 50 percent more likely to have Internet access than those earning the same income in rural areas. Falling Through the rYer, termed these discrepancies the 'digital divide. " The TAS focus was whether... | |
| 2004 - 851 pagini
...in Internet access. Indeed, at the lowest income levels, those in urban areas are more than twice as likely to have Internet access than those earning the same income in rural areas. In fact, for many of these groups, the percentage difference between having and not having Internet... | |
| Joseph L. Scarpaci, Kevin Joseph Patrick - 294 pagini
...in Internet access. Indeed, at the lower income level, those in urban areas are more than twice as likely to have Internet access than those earning the same income in rural areas" (NTIA 1999, xiii). Moreover, the divide has been increasing rather than decreasing over time (NTIA... | |
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