Source: venturebeat.com - Sunday, December 28, 2014
GUEST: A recent study commissioned by Juniper Networks revealed some surprising insights into how differently developing and developed nations view Internet access. Where you might expect users in developed nations to score their online and connected experiences higher than users in developing nations, the opposite was actually true. Here’s a look at some of the study’s most interesting findings. (You can find the full study, conducted by Wakefield Research and called the Global Bandwidth Index , on Juniper’s site. It surveyed thousands of people across Africa, Asia, Europe, and North and South America.) Connectivity: A World of Differences Some of the study results seem to reflect cultural and demographic differences that are particular to individual countries. For example, Japan, which places a high value on face-to-face interaction, ranks last among the nine countries surveyed for the percentage of people who use the Internet for banking, professional purposes, and for accessing educational materials. South Africa and India, two countries where young people make up a large portion of the population, rank first and second in the Global Bandwidth Index for the percentage of people who rely on technology for making social connections. But the strongest predictor of how people use technology and how they view the impact it has on their lives is whether they live in a developed country or an emerging market nation. The difference i
from Top News on RSS Feeds http://venturebeat.com/2014/12/28/why-internet-users-in-india-seem-more-satisfied-than-their-u-s-counterparts/
from Top News on RSS Feeds http://venturebeat.com/2014/12/28/why-internet-users-in-india-seem-more-satisfied-than-their-u-s-counterparts/
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