Saturday, January 2, 2010

Comparing 2000 to 2009

From Stephen's Lighthouse blog
http://stephenslighthouse.sirsidynix.com/archives/2009/12/ten_years_compa.html

Ten Years - Comparing 2000 and 2009

Here's a nice list of facts compiled at Forbes.

The Decade In Data
by Oliver J. Chiang

"Here's a list that compares key data points from 2000 to 2009, or the latest available figures.

--Percentage of U.S. households with a broadband connection in 2000: 6.3%
--Percentage of U.S. households with a broadband connection in 2008: 63%

--Number of e-mails sent per day in 2000: 12 billion
--Number of e-mails sent per day in 2009: 247 billion

--Revenues from mobile data services in the first half of 2000: $105 million
--Revenues from mobile data services in the first half of 2009: $19.5 billion

--Number of text messages sent in the U.S. per day in June 2000: 400,000
--Number of text messages sent in the U.S. per day in June 2009: 4.5 billion

--Percentage of U.S. households with at least one digital camera in 2000: 10%
--Percentage of U.S. households with at least one digital camera in 2008: 68.4%

--Percentage of U.S. households with at least one MP3 player in 2000: less than 2%
--Percentage of U.S. households with at least one MP3 player in 2008: almost 43%

--Number of pages indexed by Google in 2000: 1 billion
--Number of pages indexed by Google in 2008: 1 trillion

--Number of Google searches per day in 2001: 10 million
--Number of Google searches in 2009: 300 million, estimated

--Number of total Wikipedia entries in 2001: 20,000
--Number of Wikipedia entries in English in 2009: 3.1 million

--Number of blogs in 2000: less than 100,000
--Number of blogs 2008: 133 million

--Minimum free hard-disk space needed to install Windows 2000: 650 megabytes
--Minimum available hard-disk space needed to install Windows 7: 16,000 megabytes (16 gb)

--Amount of hard-disk space $300 could buy in 2000: 20 to 30 gigabytes
--Amount of hard-disk space $300 could buy in 2009: 2,000 gigabytes (2 terabytes)

Sources: Forrester Research ( FORR - news - people ), CTIA, Radicati Group, Technorati, Wikipedia, Google and Microsoft ( MSFT - news - people )."



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