Sizing up the Australian Internet

A slew of reports shows that the Internet has ensnared half the Australian population - and that it's still growing strongly.


Over the years, this site has kept hammering away at a simple point. The Internet gives us powerful new ways to communicate with each other, and the medium's users recognise that power. That's why the medium keeps growing so fast - though usually not in the way that most commercial Internet players expect.

The growth in users should surprise no-one. Email, instant messaging and the Web kill so many of the shortcomings of other media that they cannot help but succeed. They're cheap and text-centred, but alloow for expensive multimedia. They support collaboration. They're global and near-instantaneous. Even on the flawed platform of today's PCs they are, quite simply, ridiculously good.

During the Internet's 1996-2000 boom years, you had to become a virtual recluse (pardon the pun) to avoid hearing how people were flocking to the Internet. These days, almost no-one talks about it. But it's still happening. And we have Australian numbers to prove it. If you want to be optimistic, you can credibly say we have 50 per cent usage and nine per cent growth.

You won't find a newspaper editor or a television station owner bragging about how they'll have nine per cent more readers or nine per cent more viewers next year. This sort of growth just isn't happening in other media. The Internet is still gaining. And the signs are that it will keep on doing so.

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This item first filed on Wednesday, February 20, 2002 and last modified on Friday, March 05, 2004