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INTERNET SPACE
Sri Lanka ties with Google for Internet beamed from balloons
by Staff Writers
Colombo (AFP) July 28, 2015


Still offline: US non-Internet users stuck at 15 pct
Washington (AFP) July 28, 2015 - Some 15 percent of American adults are not using the Internet -- a figure which has not changed over the past two years, researchers said Tuesday.

The findings in the Pew Research Center survey suggest it may be difficult to get the remaining non-Internet adopters online.

"The size of this group (of non-Internet users) has changed little over the past three years, despite recent government and social service programs to encourage Internet adoption," the Pew researchers said.

"But that 15 percent figure is substantially lower than in 2000, when Pew Research first began to study the social impact of technology. That year, nearly half (48 percent) of American adults did not use the Internet."

Demographics were a major factor: among people over 65, some 39 percent were not using the Internet, Pew found. And 24 percent of those in rural areas did not go online.

Low-income people were also less likely to use the Internet: one out of four with incomes under $30,000 reported being unconnected.

And one-third of those with less than a high school education also reported they did not use the Web.

"Despite some groups having persistently lower rates of Internet adoption, the vast majority of Americans are online," the Pew report said.

"Over time, the offline population has been shrinking, and for some groups that change has been especially dramatic. For example, 86 percent of adults 65 and older did not go online in 2000; today that figure has been cut in half. And among those without a high school diploma, the share not using the Internet dropped from 81 percent to 33 percent in the same time period."

In its 2013 survey, Pew reported that most of those who were not using the Internet had little interest in doing so. Some said they were too old, that the technology was too complicated or that it was too expensive to get online.

The latest report is based on three surveys conducted in 2015 of a total of 5,005 US adults, with a margin of error estimated at 1.6 percentage points. Since 2000, Pew has conducted 98 surveys on the topic.

Sri Lanka teamed up on Tuesday with Google to bring high-speed Internet access to the island using balloons, aiming to become the first country in the region with complete coverage.

Foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera said officials signed an agreement with Google in the capital Colombo to launch the helium-filled, high-tech balloons above the Indian Ocean island in coming months.

Google announced Project Loon in 2013 aimed at delivering Internet connections to remote or rural areas worldwide using gear floating from thousands of the balloons.

"The entire Sri Lankan island - every village from (southern) Dondra to (northern) Point Pedro - will be covered with affordable high speed Internet using Google Loon's balloon technology," said Samaraweera, who is also IT minister.

Officials said local Internet service providers will have access to the balloons, reducing their operational costs.

Muhunthan Canagey, head of local authority the Information and Communication Technology Agency, said he expected Google to have finished sending up the balloons by next March.

"Service providers will be able to access higher speeds and improve the quality of their existing service once the balloon project is up and running," Canagey told AFP.

"We can also expect prices to come down," he said after he signed the agreement with Michael Cassidy, a Google vice president .

The balloons, once in the stratosphere, will be twice as high as commercial airliners and barely visible to the naked eye, Google has said.

Google plans to keep the balloons aloft in the stratosphere for 100 days, transmitting Internet signals to the ground, and with their movements guided by an algorithmic formula. Tests were carried out in New Zealand in 2013.

Official figures show there are 2.8 million mobile Internet connections and 606,000 fixed line Internet subscribers among Sri Lanka's more than 20 million population.

Sri Lanka became the first country in South Asia to introduce mobile phones in 1989 and the first to roll out a 3G network in 2004. It was also the first in the region to unveil a 4G network two years ago.

aj/tha/iw

Google


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