The decade did not begin auspiciously for the Internet; it opened not with a bang, but a bust. However, the 2000 dot.com bust, far from signaling the end of the Web, served as a much-needed “reset” for an industry run amok. Gone were websites with great ideas, fistfuls of cash, and no long-term business plan. (Webvan, Pets.com, Kozmo.com, anyone?) The new crop of sites to emerge from the ashes were sleeker, more nimble versions of their predecessors.
Over the past 10 years, the phenomenal growth of the Web has fundamentally changed the way we live, work and communicate. In November, a Pew Research Center study showed some startling changes in how we use the Internet:
- 2000: 46% of adults used the Internet
- 2009: 77-79% of adults use the Internet
- 2000: 5% of households had broadband
- 2009: 63% of households have broadband
- 2000: 0% connected to Internet wirelessly
- 2009: 54-56% connect to the Internet wirelessly
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