Cable has 67% to 105% more users than DSL in the US, according to two recent surveys. Overall, broadband grew by 0.83 percentage points in June, with 36.7% of wired US users enjoying a high-speed connection. The charts and tables below, derived from Nielsen//NetRatings and Ipsos-Insight data, show trends in connection speeds to the Internet in the US.
As of June 2003, most users in the US connect to the Internet using dial-up modems of 56Kbps or less. 51.4% use 56Kbps modems, 9% use 28/33.3Kbps, and 2.9% use 14.4Kbps modems. In total, 63.3% of home users in the US connect to the Internet at 56Kbps or less (see Figure 1).
Figure 1: Web Connection Speed Trends - Home Users (US)
Source: Nielsen//NetRatings
Broadband penetration in US homes increased by 0.83 percentage points in June. As of June 2003 broadband penetration was at 36.7%, up from 35.87% in May. This is higher than the average increase in broadband of 0.72 percentage points per month from October 1999 to May 2003. Extrapolating the data provided by Nielsen//NetRatings, broadband share in the US should exceed 50% by June of 2004 (see Figure 2).
Figure 2: Broadband Connection Speed Trend - Home Users (US)
Extrapolated from Nielsen//NetRatings data
Most workers in the US enjoy high-speed connections to the Internet. Most use a high-speed line such as a T1 connection, and share bandwidth between computers connected to a network. The speed of each connection decreases as more employees hook up to the LAN. As of June of 2003, of those connected to the Internet, 69.8% of US users at work enjoy a high-speed connection, up slightly from 69.7% in May. 30.2% connect from work at 56Kbps or less (see Figure 3).
Figure 3: Web Connection Speed Trends - Work Users (US)
Source: Nielsen//NetRatings
Ipsos-Insight found in a May 2003 survey of 1,000 US adults that 40% had broadband while 59% had a dial-up connection. Of those with broadband, 25% had a cable connection while 15% had a DSL connection. Confirming this trend, Nielsen//NetRatings found that cable has over twice the penetration (14.6%) of DSL (7.1%) in the US as of June 2003. Extrapolating the data provided by Nielsen//NetRatings, cable share in the US should exceed 25% by summer 2006 while DSL should exceed 10% by June 2004 (see Figure 4).
Figure 4: Cable versus DSL Growth Trend - Home Users (US)
Extrapolated from Nielsen//NetRatings data
Connection type | Jun-00 | Jun-01 | Jun-02 | Jun-03 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cable | 3.1% | 6.2% | 11.7% | 14.6% |
DSL | 1.0% | 2.4% | 4.7% | 7.1% |
Source: Nielsen//NetRatings
Connection type | Penetration |
---|---|
Dial-up | 59% |
Cable | 25% |
DSL | 15% |
Other | 1% |
Source: Ipsos-Insight
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By website optimization on 14 Jul 2003 PM