US adults said they are spending more time on the Internet — nearly eight percent of their week this year, according to a recent survey.
The Harris Poll reported that Americans 18 and older spent an average of 13 hours a week online, excluding time spent checking e-mail. That's an hour a week less than in October 2008, during the election campaign and burgeoning financial crisis — but nearly double the time spent online a decade ago. In 1999, Americans said they spent an average of seven hours a week online. That increased to between eight and nine hours through 2006 and then grew to 11 hours a week in 2007.
Harris said the increase in the past two years was "striking," and partly reflected growth in TV watched on the Internet and online shopping. Half the people surveyed said they had shopped over the Internet in the last month.
People from ages 25 to 49 spent the most amount of time on the Internet (17-18 hours a week), whether at home, work or another location. Americans who were 65 and older spent only eight hours a week online, on average.
Nearly a quarter of people aged 25 to 29 said they spent between 24 to 168 hours online per week.
Sunbelt is still hot –for migrants
Warm-weather states still gained the most residents despite their real estate meltdowns, according to the US Census — but migration to many states in the South and West is slowing.
Between July 1, 2008 and July 1, 2009, Texas had the biggest population gain by number of persons, said government estimates. The Lone Star State added 478,000 people. It had a total population of 24.8 million, the second most populous.
Other population winners:
¦ California (381,000 more people). California remained the country's most populous state with 37 million residents.
¦ North Carolina (134,000)
¦ Georgia (131,000)
¦ Florida (114,000)
While Florida, California and Texas continued to gain residents, the Census survey released last week said the number of Americans moving into former hot spot states such as Arizona and North and South Carolina had "slowed dramatically" amid the plunge in real estate prices and high joblessness. Residents of Florida and Nevada even left for other states — but those states still gained in population overall because more people were born than died and new residents arrived from abroad.