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"Podcasting continues to grow at a rate that's faster than a snail's pace, but not by much. The Pew Internet and American Life project reports that almost one in five Internet users (19 percent) say they have saved a podcast for later listening. That's up from 12 percent in Pew's August 2006 survey.

But the latest study also concedes that "podcasting has yet to become a fixture in the everyday lives of Internet users, as very few Internet users download podcasts on a typical day." Just 3 percent do so, in fact. And there's a real generational divide here of which media trend watchers should take heed. After 30, podcasting download rates take a dip; after 50, they take a serious dive; after 65, forget it."


Many news sites move articles into data bases after a period of time and then offer them for sale, in the process changing the URLs that link to them. Or they require registration. Thus, we provide a link to the front page of the news website and the information necessary to find the story on that site, rather than a direct link to the article.

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DATA POINT

81%

the percentage of online news users who say they do not mind online advertising because it allows the content to be free.

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The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project is one of seven projects that make up the Pew Research Center. The Center is supported by The Pew Charitable Trust.