Young people aged between 16 and 24 spend more than 27 hours a week on the internet, communications watchdog Ofcom said as it laid bare the extent of the UK’s changing internet habits over the last decade.
People are
spending twice as much time online compared to 10 years ago, fuelled by
increasing use of tablets and smartphones. The biggest increase has been
among young adults, with time spent online almost tripling from 10
hours and 24 minutes each week in 2005 to 27 hours and 36 minutes in
2014.
In total, the average adult
spends more than 20 hours online a week, which includes time spent on
the internet at work. Meanwhile the average person spends 2.5 hours
every week “online while on the move” - away from their home, work or
place of study. This is a five-fold increase from 2005, when the figure
was just 30 minutes.
Overall, the
proportion of adults using the internet has risen by half - from six in
ten in 2005 to almost nine in ten today, which questioned 1,890 adults aged 16 and over about their internet consumption habits.
Computer is still king, and is still the primary device for accessing
online content. However, tablet and smartphone use has been steadily
increasing, and two thirds of adults now regularly use a smartphone. In
particular, activities such as watching video clips online, playing
games, instant messaging and social media have driven growth in mobile
internet use in the UK.
Meanwhile,
instant messaging use has leapt from 38pc of mobile phone users in 2013
to 42pc in 2014, driven by services such as WhatsApp and Facebook
Messenger.More people are also watching TV and films online. A quarter of internet users regularly catch up on programmes online, compared to one in ten in 2007. This rises to 39pc of 16-24 year olds, up from 21pc in 2007. However, TV is still an important method of consumption for many. When asked which device they would miss the most, almost four in ten adults said they would feel most lost without a television.
“New technologies are opening up a myriad of other possibilities for young people. It’s not just watching content – they’re messaging friends, texting at the same time. Inevitably, as the younger generation gets older and they set up their own home, TV viewing consumption will be affected,” said Toby Syfret, a tv analyst at media research firm Enders Analysis.
“However, a 40-inch television screen offers quality you can’t get from a tablet or smartphone. So televisions are never going to become unimportant. But viewing habits are changing as people become more comfortable with catch-up and on demand services.”
The mobile phone is now the primary device used for gaming with a quarter of mobile users playing games at least once a week, compared to 17pc playing on games consoles, the report said.
With this, social media has also become popular among all age brackets. Some 80pc of internet users aged between 35 and 44 are now on social media, up from just 12pc in 2007.
In total, the use of social media has tripled since 2007, when Ofcom first asked people about their social media habits. Nearly three quarters of internet users aged 16 and above say they have a social media profile, compared to 22pc in 2007.
Four in five social media users log into these websites or apps – which include Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram or Tumblr - at least once a day, up from 30pc in 2007.
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