Old movie search
Twenty-five percent (that's thirty-three million) use a search engine on a daily basis. old movie search Find-people-by-maiden-name. Men are more likely than women to use a search engine on a given day. 33% of men and 25% of women reported using a search engine on a specified day. College grads are more likely to use a search engine than high school grads. old movie search Word search puzzles free. 39% of Internet users with three or more years under their belts use a search engine on a given day, while only 14% of those online for less than six months use the searches on a given day. Google is the most used search engine in terms of minutes searched. It's currently at 25. old movie search Rare book search. 9 minutes and gaining. However, MSN has the most number of users. It recorded 43 million unique users in May of 2002, compared to Google's 36 million. Yahoo had 38 million unique visitors during that month. Information searches fell into four main categories: information about people, health, government and religion. People searches leaned towards the personal (66. 6%), more than the professional (33. 3%). College grads were more likely to do people searches than high school grads, and younger people (18-29) were more likely to do people searches than older people (50-64). Seventy-three million Americans looked for health information. . . up from 52 million in fall of 2000. Women are more likely than men to look for heath information, but are likely to be turned off by sites that are selling something, or by sites that do not provide the date and source of their information. 81% started their search at a search engine or at a web portal like Yahoo, AOL or MSN. The others started at a health information site. 45% started at the top of the search list and worked their way down. The rest clicked through according to recognized names or relevant content descriptions. 82% reported satisfaction with the health information they found. One in three say they know someone who has been helped by Internet health information. Two out of 100 know someone who has been harmed. Most searched for health information pertains to specific diseases, weight control, and prescription drug information. Inquiries are increasing for mental health information and for sensitive medical topics. Sixty-eight million Americans reported using government agency web sites -- a dramatic increase from 40 million in the March of 2000. 40% started their search at a major search engine or web site such as AOL or MSN. Most scanned the search link for names that seemed to fit. Only 21% visited sites according to rank. 28 million Americans (up from 19 million in late 2000) use the search engines to find religious or spiritual information or contacts.
Old movie search
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