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Commentary

In our report, “The Future of the Internet,” we quote Douglas Rushkoff, an author and professor at the New York University Interactive Telecommunications Program, who wrote, “The biggest changes, as always with new media, will be metaphorical. It's not that anything in particular that we do on the internet is so important – it's that behaviors we have online can serve as models for behaviors that change in real life.”

Online banking is a good example – and the topic of a data memo released today. Fully 63% of home broadband users do their banking online, compared to 32% of users with dial-up access at home. Broadband users probably do all sorts of chores online – grocery shopping, gift buying, party invitations – and they expect that the internet will provide the convenient solution for all their personal business. And they may start to question why certain entities (doctors’ offices come to mind) can’t yet serve their high-speed lifestyle needs.

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Copyright 2012

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.