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To: Daniel O'Keefe who wrote (23150)6/18/1999 9:47:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 41369
 
Posted at 07:00 a.m. PDT; Friday, June 18, 1999

Study: U.S. Net users climb to 92
million

by Ted Bridis
Associated Press

WASHINGTON - The number of people over 16 years old in
the United States and Canada using the Internet has climbed to 92
million, and the number of women making purchases online is
rising dramatically, a survey shows.

The most popular items for women to buy on the Web were
books, CDs and videos, with 9.6 million purchases of those items
made during the last nine months.

But in a twist, the number of women buying computers over the
Internet climbed fastest, up 160 percent to 1.3 million over the
previous nine months.

The study by Nielsen Media Research and CommerceNet shows
increases in the number of women who made at least one
purchase using the Internet rose 80 percent during the time
period.

"Certainly the types of products you can purchase online are so
much more diverse than in years past," Jerome Samson, one of
the study's coordinators, said yesterday. "The only thing you could
purchase online were hardware, software, things that mainly
appealed to a male audience."

Men also bought mostly books, CDs and videos but also bought
far more computers than women.

Among both men and women, online purchases of software
remained flat.

"Nearly half of North America uses the Internet," said Mark
Resch, executive vice president at CommerceNet. "We use it to
communicate, to learn, to shop and to buy. It is as integral a part
of our lives as the telephone."

The survey, based on interviews with more than 7,200 people in
North America, said 54 percent of people on the Internet are
men, although men represent a higher proportion, 62 percent, of
all online buyers.

The study distinguished online buyers from online shoppers, who
merely research and compare prices and features among products
and services, even if they don't ultimately make a purchase.

The same study last August showed 79 million people over 16 on
the Internet in North America - with 43 percent of them women.
The study in September 1997 counted 58 million, also with 43
percent women.

But last year's study also showed that more than 71 percent of
Internet purchasers were men.

The latest study also said 72 million people use the Internet from
home, while 46 million use it from work and 28 million from
school. The rest use it from other locations, such as a library or a
friend's home.

Copyright © 1999 Seattle Times Company



To: Daniel O'Keefe who wrote (23150)6/18/1999 10:29:00 PM
From: Pruguy  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 41369
 
I read it...maybe I was wrong on Cohen's reccomendations.. I am still going to stick by the other premise I believe, which is that Cohen is not a very good analyst and saw the writing on the wall at Merryl and took another job with a third rate firm wityh a lot of upside potential before he was demoted at merryl
Please give this a rest