A propos de l'auteur de ce blog

Mehdi Lamloum, bloggeur et Vidéobloggeur depuis 2005. Actuellement Concepteur dans une agence de communication.
Je traite dans ce blog essentiellement d'Internet, de blogging et de communication digitale sous ses différents aspects.
Les informations, opinions, réflexions, analyses, conneries, ne représentent que mon avis personnel et n'engagent en aucun cas celui de mon employeur ou de mes partenaires.
Pour me contacter, vous pouvez utiliser mon email me [at] mehdilamloum [dot] com ou alors me contacter viaFacebook ou Twitter

Contrat Creative Commons
Ce(tte) oeuvre de Mehdi Lamloum est mise à disposition selon les termes de la licence Creative Commons Paternité - Pas d'Utilisation Commerciale - Partage des Conditions Initiales à l'Identique 3.0 Unported.

jeudi 27 septembre 2007

Le web plus important que le sexe?


Une étude de JWT sur un panel de 1000 américains a pour résultat que 20% d'entre-eux déclarent avoir moins de temps pour le sexe parce qu'ils sont occupés online.
28% said they spend less time socializing with friends because of it. And 20% said they spend less time having sex because they're too busy online


Les autres données de l'étude:
only 17% of the 1,011 online Americans who participated in the survey said they willingly had gone without connectivity for more than two weeks within the past year. When asked how long they would feel OK without online access, 15% of respondents said just a day or less, 21% said a couple of days and another 19% said a few days.

About half of people 35 and older said if they can't access the Internet when they want to, they feel like something important is missing

The survey showed that time spent with new digital technologies eats into time spent watching television or listening to the radio. Forty-four percent said they spend less time with print newspapers and magazines, and 47% watch less TV, though that number jumps to 52% for those under 35. And fully half of respondents say they now spend less time shopping in actual brick-and-mortar stores.

For those respondents younger than 35, 78% said they don't own a desktop computer, compared with 93% of those older than 55. Instead, 61% of the under-35s own a laptop, compared with 36% of those over 55.


Via