Some Americans 'constantly' on internet while others remain offline

A report said the growth of smartphones and other mobile devices has made it easier to be always connected

The growing use of smartphones and other mobile devices has made it easier for adults to remain online almost constantly, a Pew Research Center survey found. PHOTO: AFP

More than one in four American adults say they are online "almost constantly," but a small percentage still don't use the internet at all, a survey showed on Wednesday.

The Pew Research Center report said the growth of smartphones and other mobile devices has made it easier to be always connected.

As a result, the percentage of US adults saying they are almost constantly online rose to 26 per cent from 21 per cent in a 2015 survey.

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Overall, the researchers found 77 per cent of Americans go online on a daily basis, including 43 per cent who connect several times a day.

But 11 per cent said they don't use the internet at all, despite programs encouraging Americans to use online services. That represents a modest change from 2015 when 15 per cent did not use the internet.


Older adults are more likely to be offline, Pew said: About one in three of those over 65 did not use the internet compared with just two per cent in the 18-29 age group.

Younger adults, meanwhile, "are at the vanguard of the constantly connected," the Pew report said.

About 39 per cent of 18-to 29-year-olds are online almost constantly and 49 per cent go online multiple times per day.

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Frequent internet users are more likely to be college educated or have incomes above $75,000 annually, Pew said.

The findings were based on a survey of 2,002 American adults in January 2018, with a margin of error estimated at 2.4 percentage points.
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