©Mark Ollig
Be
sure to follow your Bits & Bytes columnist on Twitter at @bitsandbytes.
(Above image royalty license-to-use paid for by Mark Ollig)
Would
it surprise you to learn more than half of the world’s population has no direct
access to the internet?
A
recent estimate of the planet’s population is 7.5 billion . . . and growing.
As
of March 31, there were 3.7 billion internet users, according to a global
statistical study provided by Nielson Online, International Telecommunications
Union, and the German global research firm GfK.
For
those of you wondering what GfK means, it’s the German abbreviation for:
Gesellschaft für Konsumforschung (Society for Consumer Research).
A
side note: GfK released its February study of Americans who have “cut the cord”
and get their phone, television, and internet social media content wirelessly.
This
study reported 68 percent of millennials averaging 34 years of age, are among
these “Cordless Americans.”
I
do believe it’s inevitable; the future will be one of cordless, wireless
consumer electronic devices; although the supportive, physical switching
platform running over a fiber-optic network will be around for a long time.
The
study reported half of those ages 50 and over, said they will never cut the
cord on their television, telephone, or internet services.
Of
the 41 percent within this age group who did cut the cord, 9 percent realized
they had become “cord-cutting regretters.”
I
assume those 9 percenters most likely returned to a physically wired connection
for services.
The
English website for GfK is http://www.gfk.com/en-us.
Yes,
I’m digressing, so let’s get back to today’s main topic.
The
global statistical study showed North America, which includes Bermuda, Canada,
Greenland, St. Pierre & Miquelon, and the US, with 4.9 percent of the
world’s population, and having the highest global internet penetration rate of
88.1 percent.
Citizen’s
internet access within the US is 287 million, or 88 percent of the estimated
325 million folks living here.
The
North American region with the highest internet usage is Bermuda, with 96.3
percent of its 70,537 citizens being internet users.
For
my Canadian readers; 93.2 percent or 33 million of your 35.4 million fellow
citizens are internet users.
China,
the largest Asian country with 1.4 billion people, more than doubles the number
of US internet users with 731.4 million.
India,
the second largest-populated Asian country with 1.3 billion citizens, has 462.1
million internet users.
South
Korea, with nearly 51 million people, has 45.3 million internet users, while
their northerly neighboring country;,North Korea, with a population estimated
at 25.4 million citizens, shows only 14,000 having internet access.
The
Asian country with the largest percentage of its population using the internet
is Japan.
Of
the 126 million residents of Japan, 118.4 million are internet users, which is
94 percent of the country’s population.
The
countries making up Asia have a combined population of 4.1 billion, and have
approximately 2 billion internet users.
Europe,
with 822.7 million people, has nearly 637 million or 77.4 percent of its
population using the internet.
Internet
World Stats (IWS) website’s numbers for Cuba from June 30, 2016 shows 33.6
percent of their 11 million citizens, approximately 3.7 million, having
internet access. This number is expected to increase as Cuba strengthens its
ties with the US, and provides improved internet connectivity and availability
to its people.
IWS
also reported the languages most used by internet users.
English
is used by 952.1 million people, 763.3 million use Chinese, 293.8 million use
Spanish, and 173.5 million uses Arabic.
As
of March 25, the global internet user saturation rate stood at 49.6 percent of
the world’s population.
Folks,
we’re practically halfway to a globally-connected internet.
Let’s
not stop now.
Eventually,
everyone living on this planet will benefit by using the internet in one way or
another to improve their lives, whether it’s through education or their work.
Additionally,
much of this planet’s transportation, robotics, drones, artificial intelligence
processors, smartdevices, sensors, and other gadgets yet-to-come, will
ultimately be linked and networked via the internet grid.
An
inter-planetary internet system will someday network future robotic and
human-populated bases on the moon, Mars, and beyond – so stay tuned for that.
(Above image royalty license-to-use paid for by Mark Ollig)