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Web Surfing Losing Its Luster

asv108 writes "The New York Times has an article about how trolling the web is not nearly as much fun as it used to be. Reasons for the decline cited in the article include: commercialization, lack of compelling content, instant messaging, P2P, and the fact that it's been mainstream for a couple of years now. The average online session decreased from 90 (March 2000) to 83 minutes in March of 2001." It'll be interesting to see where the Net fits in relative to TV and movies for pure entertainment.

2 of 328 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Broadband by OrenWolf · · Score: 5, Interesting
    MOD PARENT UP!

    I can virtually guarantee this is the reason, coupled with the fact that people are now able to find things *signifigantly* faster than before. Think about the level of difficulty you had finding and accessing content a few years ago, compared to our broadband, post-google era.. People need to surf for shorter periods of time to accomplish the same tasks.

    In essence, it is that the web is now more efficient than it was a few years ago.

  2. Re:Broadband? by geekoid · · Score: 5, Interesting

    not nearly enough people have broadband to impact the figure that large.
    Plus, its a prett specious(sp) argument ayways.
    How many people sit down and go "I'm going to surf until I download X amount of data, then quit?
    I had broadband, I surfed more. There are all kinds of things I won't even attempt with dial-up. Its too damn slow, and advertising kills my speed. I won't even go to /. from my dial up connection any more.
    Well for years I was saying need faster connect, from 2400, to 9600, to14.4m to 28, then 56. well the universe gets a little laugh now that I have 56K, but web site take even longer to download do to bad programing and advertisment. mostly bad programing.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect