ENN - Electric News.net
Free e-mail alerts & newsletter - Sign up here
Free e-mail alerts & newsletter - Sign up here
Edit your alerts
News
   CORRECTIONS
Survey
Let us know how to make ENN better!
Take our reader's survey.
Adworld UTV_AD

Who wants multimedia messaging?
I'm talking mobile again, but this time it's a question of how/if the public are going to be able to access the new services being planned by the mobile manufacturers and the networks.
More here

 

The following e-mail will be sent on your behalf.

 has sent the following story to you from ElectricNews.net.

The story is available from https://electricnews.net/news.html?code=1392754

Huge boost in Irish PC and Internet use
Tuesday, March 20 2001
by Kevin O' Brady


Almost 417,000 households in Ireland now have a computer, or around a fifth of
the population, and nearly two-thirds of these are connected to the Internet. The number of home computers with Internet connections has risen from 61,100 in
1998 to 262,700, according to the survey by the Central Statistics Office. This
means that the number of home connections more than quadrupled between 1998 and
the fourth quarter of 2000.

The findings are based on the CSO's Quarterly National Survey of home computing
for the fourth quarter of 2000. Information for the survey was gathered from
39,000 households, 95 percent of which supplied information on home computing.

The figures mean that 20.4 percent of all households in the country have a
computer and that 63 percent of these are connected to the Internet.

Computer ownership is highest in Dublin and the Mid-East region, where some 38
percent of homes have a computer, according to the survey. There are about
147,000 home computers in the Dublin area and 48,300 in the Mid-East region.

Elsewhere, about 30 percent of households in the South West and Mid-West have a
computer, compared with 29 percent in the South East, 28.5 percent in the
Midlands, 27.1 percent in the West, and 25.1 percent in the border counties.

Computer ownership is lowest among those aged 65 and over, with only 8.5 percent
of households with a person in that bracket having a computer, according to the
survey.

About 81 percent of home computers are used for educational purposes and 89
percent are used for leisure, according to the survey. Meanwhile, about 47
percent of home computers are used for work, although this rises to 54.4 percent
where the user is aged between 25 and 34.

Although the number of home computer Internet connections has risen, other types
of Internet connections are less common, according to the survey.

The findings show that 15,800 households have Internet access through their
television, 26,300 through WAP phones and 5,000 through games consoles.

This survey is the largest to date to include information about home ownership of
computers, according to Joe Treacy, a CSO senior statistician.

"The findings bear out the reality of the increase in Internet usage," said
Treacy. "The findings show the growth of computer usage among particular age
groups. This is very strong in the 25-34 age group, which shows that traditional
family units are buying computers."

In addition, the number of households with a computer in the Dublin and Mid-East
region is in keeping with the work and age profile of people living in those
areas, said Treacy.

The findings of the survey compare with about 34 percent of households having a
computer in the UK in 1998-99, according to Treacy.

The CSO is at www.cso.ie
Search

Jobs
ENN Corporate Services Ad Red Moon Media Ad ENN Message Boards House Ad
Powered by The CIA
Designed by Redmoon media

 

© Copyright ElectricNews.Net Ltd 1999-2002.