Posted by Invention Girl | Filed under Consumer Trends
Do you tend to browse the web for the latest headlines? Or do you have a favorite anchor on the nightly news? Perhaps you even have a subscription for the daily newspaper. InventHelp’s Invention Girl leans toward option A (the wild and wonderful web) when I need an information fix.
Most Americans, as it turns out, are still getting their news from the television. Fewer Americans are reading newspapers and more are turning to the internet. It’s not surprising to learn that younger folks make up the majority of internet news proponents, and that older individuals tend to prefer TV or the paper.
Among those who get their news from TV, fewer are watching the local evening news and more are opting for cable news sources like CNN or Fox News Channel. The group that relies most on the Internet for news is the smallest, at 13 percent of those polled. Of the internet-savvy group (of which InventHelp’s Invention Girl is a member!), 80 percent have a college education and they are twice as likely to read an online newspaper than a printed version.
The survey was conducted by Princeton Survey Research Associates International. It polled 3,615 adults 18 years or older by telephone between April 30 and June 1, and has a margin of error of 2 percentage points.
Be it by folding the paper, surfing the web or flipping on the nightly news, InventHelp’s Invention Girl will do whatever it takes to stay up to date on the latest in technology and inventions!
Related InventHelp posts:
Consumer Trends
No Comments
Comments Feed
Del.ico.us
Digg This