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Dragging the Brits (and the Yanks?) Online

By Vera H-C Chan
Wed, June 17, 2009, 3:27 pm PDT

Britain may have invented the lightbulb, the steam engine, and toilet paper, but trailblazing the Internet isn't among the country's strengths.

One-third of Britain's population is without home Internet access. Prime Minister Gordon Brown is hell-bent on getting his countrymen (and women) broadband access (at 2 megabytes per second, mind you) in three years, at a cost of $328 million. The British leader even declared in an op-ed piece for The Times (UK) that the "internet is as vital as water and gas," and essential to the UK as "bridges, roads and railways" were during the Industrial Revolution.

Before any Americans start snickering at Brits being the Luddites of the Internet world, check this Census figure out: 62% of American households connect to the Web from home. And the kids aren't helping either: About 88% of 12-to-14 year old Americans surf, but 100% of British kids that age do so. When was the last time you could get every single teen to do something?

Barack Obama, who counts Internet President among his many informal titles, has done a lot of talk about getting every American online. However the recession will pose some problems in getting Web access to poor and rural areas. The good news is that more people are signing up for high-speed access (and even paying more for it). That might lift the U.S. dismal ranking of No. 15 out of 30 countries for broadband subscribers (per 100 inhabitants—America leads in sheer numbers since the population's huge). United Kingdom on that same list? No. 13.

But maybe Britain—and the U.S. for that matter—should slow down on all this Web stuff. The Annenberg Center for the Digital Future polled about 2,030 people and found more Americans are spending less family time, but more (online) social networking time. Perhaps all those Brits who lead a Web-less life know something after all.

Filed under: Internet, United States, England, United Kingdom

The British Buzz Invasion

Wed, November 23, 2005, 11:00 am PST

The U.S. and U.K. may have parted ways less than amicably back in the revolutionary days, but since then they've given us The Beatles and Beckham, and we've given them bebop and Britney. Yes, we share quite a bit with our friends across the sea. Well, except for in Search, that is.

Looking at the U.K. Buzz Index, we noted some distinctly different searches in the British Isles. Singer Robbie Williams, for example, has been on the charts for 96 days. Classical-soprano-turned-pop-sensation Charlotte Church has dominated the U.K. music searches for 153 days, recently spiking 1,239% in the Buzz. Blimey!

Heard of Eastenders? Across the pond, this BBC soap is an institution. At last count, the long-running, often-gritty TV show has been on the air for over 20 years and on the British Buzz charts for 487 days.

Sienna Miller may be popular in the U.S., but she's a celebrity on a cosmic scale in the U.K. Seems the Brits love to follow her and her on-again, off-again, rocky relationship with Jude Law. Sienna's buzz is on a 46-day run over there, but she hasn't surfaced on the U.S. charts.

It's true that Yanks and Brits share a fascination with Becks and Britney, for better or for worse. But -- if Search is any indicator -- it looks like we'll probably maintain our subtle differences.

 

Filed under: United Kingdom

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