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![]() Seniors Online: Few, but Fervent
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Only 15 percent of those aged 65 and older are Internet savvy, but as a group those seniors are fervent users, with 69 percent going online on a typical day, according to a poll of 4,335 older Americans released on Sunday. That compares to 56 percent of all Americans who go online, said the Pew Internet & American Life Project, which conducted the survey from March to December 2000. The survey showed that wired seniors were more likely than their peers to be married, highly educated and enjoying relatively high retirement incomes. Women outnumber men among senior citizens by 141 to 100, but 60 percent of online seniors are men, while only 40 percent are women, the poll found. It noted that the statistics mirrored those of the early Internet population. But older women were coming online at faster rates than other age groups. More than half of all senior citizens who have gone online in the past six months are women, the poll showed. Once online, 93 percent of seniors said they had used e-mail; 58 percent had found hobby information; 55 percent had read the news; 53 percent had searched for health and medical information; 53 percent had browsed the Internet ``just for fun;'' and 53 percent had checked weather updates. By contrast, young Internet users were more likely to identify work-related research or shopping as their top activities. Fifty-six percent of online seniors said the Internet has improved their connections with family members, reporting that they are communicating more often with a daughter or son, now that they use e-mail. Generally, seniors were less likely than other age groups to have sampled other Internet services, such as downloading music, banking online or joining in online chat sessions. The age group just behind the seniors -- people aged 50 to 64 -- were three times more likely to have Internet access, the survey found. Fifty-one percent of people in this age group reported having Internet access. ``Internet users aged 50-64 are likely to keep their Internet access even after they retire and this 'silver tsunami' may be the generation that takes advantage of all the Internet has to offer them as they get older,'' the pollsters wrote. The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus one percentage point. The full report is available on www.pewinternet.org. |
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