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54 million Americans have used the internet to take virtual tours

Since the dawn of the Web in the early 1990s, internet advocates have argued that one of the Web's most powerful applications would be to open up new worlds to people and help them easily experience faraway places.

A new survey by the Pew Internet & American Life Project finds that 45% of online American adults have taken advantage of this internet application and taken virtual tours of another location online. That represents 54 million adults who have used the internet to venture somewhere else.

On a typical day, more than two million people are using the internet to take a virtual tour.

Some of the most popular virtual tour destinations include museums, tourist and vacation locales, colleges and prep schools, real estate, historical exhibits, parks and nature preserves, public places such as the White House and the Taj Mahal, and hotels and motels.

This is a first-time measurement by the Project that came in its most recent tracking survey between November 23 and November 30. It is not possible for us to say how fast this activity online has been growing, but it is safe to say that the spread of broadband connections has made virtual tours easier and encouraged those who create tours to create richer tour experiences through streamed tours. Some 60% of those who have broadband connections at home and 62% of those who have broadband connections at work have taken virtual tours.

Unlike many other internet activities, virtual tours are not the province of young internet users. Indeed, 52% of younger Baby Boomers (those age 40-49) have taken virtual tours, compared to just 37% of those in Generation Y (ages 18-27). Those who take virtual tours are also highly educated: 58% of the internet users with college or graduate degrees have taken virtual tours. In addition, tour takers are slightly more likely to be urban than rural (51% of urban internet users have taken virtual tours vs. 42% of online rural residents).

54 million online Americans have taken virtual tours. The percentage of that 54 million virtual tour takers who fall into each group are:

Men 47%
Women 53%
Race/ethnicity
Whites 80%
Blacks 7%
Hispanics 9%
Other/Refused to answer 4%
Age
Generation Y (ages 18-27) 16%
Generation X (ages 28-39) 27%
Younger Baby Boomers (ages 40-49) 28%
Older Baby Boomers (ages 50-58) 21%
Matures (ages 59-68) 5%
After work (age 69+) 3%
Household income
Live in households earning less than $30,000 15%
$30,000-$49,999 22%
$50,000-$74,999 21%
$75,000 or more 42%
Educational attainment
Not high school graduate 4%
High School graduate 23%
Some college 27%
College and graduate school degree 46%
Community type
Rural 13%
Suburban 55%
Urban 32%
Internet access at home
Dial up 36%
Broadband 64%
Parental status
Parent with child under 18 living at home 44%
Non-parent 56%

Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project November 2004 survey.
N=537 internet users. Margin of error is +-5%.
The nationwide phone survey cited here involved interviews with 914 adults, 534 of whom are internet users. The margin of error is plus or minus four percentage points.

The Pew Internet & American Life Project is a non-profit initiative of the Pew Research Center and is funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts to examine the social impact of the internet. The Project does not advocate any policy outcomes. It is non-partisan.

 
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