Search:  

 
 
   All ForumsHot TopicsGallery






how-to block ads


 
Forums » 53% Of US Homes Broadband Connected » Don't worry...
Search Topic:
Share Topic:
RSS topic:
toggle:
flat / full
normal / watch
Post a:
Post a:
Pure BS »
« I'm poor...  
AuthorAll Replies


Fluker

join:2005-04-07
West Lafayette, IN

reply to McSummation
Re: Statistics...

I totally agree.

On campus, the greater majority of people have a cell phone and broadband, but no landline.

I can't think of any student I know with a real phone. All of them have at least cable internet though. I doubt any of these people could have been included in this statistic if it were call based.


tschmidt
Premium,MVM
join:2000-11-12
Milford, NH
·Hollis Hosting
·Verizon Online DSL
·Fairpoint Communic..

reply to Jerm
said by Jerm See Profile :


I'm not sure why you think it would be flawed. I mean how much better can you get than a random sample? They calculated to margin of error as +/- 2.5% so that should give us some sense of accuracy.
I would agree if it were in fact random but it is not.

They called folks about broadband. That means only people with Wireline phones were included in the survey.

Did they randomly select x number of people and call those numbers ignoring non respondents or did they create a pool of numbers and call until they reached the number they needed to be statistical accurate? Each approach creates different biases.

When did they call and did they call at the same local time in each time zone?

/Tom


McSummation
Mmmm, Zeebas Are Tastee.
Premium,MVM
join:2003-08-13
Round Rock, TX
·AT&T Southwest

reply to Jerm
said by Jerm See Profile :

Take all the phone books in the US ...
Then that may automatically eliminate all the folks that don't have landlines, but have only cell phones.

satellite68

join:2007-04-11
Louisville, KY


1 edit
reply to Jerm
Your assumption is incorrect; you are assuming that they followed your example-"randomly" calling 1600 households.
I doubt that happened here. This issue is highly politicized and often these kind of surveys are funded by (gasp) the major telecoms and/or policymakers or their brethren. I'm betting they "prequalified" the respondents to get the outcomes requested/demanded by whomever funded this survey.

It's easy to lie with statistics.

satellite68

join:2007-04-11
Louisville, KY

reply to Ahrenl
said by Ahrenl See Profile :

Statistical Bias is very easy to manufacture, so I would first look at who provides their funding, and why the research was done in the first place. I'm not saying the numbers are incorrect.
Thank you, that's what I would've said sooner had you not beaten me to the punch.

lesopp

join:2001-06-27
Land O Lakes, FL
reply to bmn
How many people stuck on dial up couldn't participate because those collecting the data couldn't call them?

bmn
? ? ?
Premium,ExMod 2003-06
join:2001-03-15
hiatus

reply to Jerm
said by Jerm See Profile :

I mean how much better can you get than a random sample?
A representative sample... Random samples are not always representative.
--
Prove it...

Ahrenl

join:2004-10-26
North Andover, MA
·Verizon FIOS

reply to Jerm
Statistical Bias is very easy to manufacture, so I would first look at who provides their funding, and why the research was done in the first place. I'm not saying the numbers are incorrect.

I do find it interesting that the under $50,000 households % of broadband users is growing faster than the over $50,000 households. Maybe they're only lower overall because they're generally less informed.


Jerm

join:2000-04-10
Richland, WA

reply to satellite68
Thats the beauty of statistics, the results of a small sample are generally spot on when comparing against the "whole".

I'm not sure why you think it would be flawed. I mean how much better can you get than a random sample? They calculated to margin of error as +/- 2.5% so that should give us some sense of accuracy. I guess you'd have to know their exact method to know if it was flawed. Take all the phone books in the US and randomly select 1600 households via computer and call them up - doesn't seem too hard to me, and I'm not sure why you'd be wanting more accuracy than that.

There are a few arguments that could be made though. For example the people have to have phone service. But in general I think the statistic is probably correct and seems to fly in my book. Why do you think otherwise?
Forums » 53% Of US Homes Broadband ConnectedPure BS »
« I'm poor...  


Thursday, 26-Nov 23:50:33 Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Hosting by www.nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo | feedback | contact
over 10 years online! © 1999-2009 dslreports.com.
page compression OFF
Most commented news this week
· [112] Time Warner Cable Fires Broadside At Broadcasters
· [109] New AT&T Ad Campaign Hits Back At Verizon
· [95] Apple Joins AT&T Verizon Snark Fest
· [87] New Bill Takes Aim At Higher Verizon ETFs
· [70] TiVo Sees Record Customer Losses
· [62] In-Flight Internet Headed For Bumpy Landing?
· [54] Thanksgiving Open Thread
· [37] ICANN Slams DNS Redirection
· [36] Senators Want ACTA Made Public
· [35] EFF Wages War On Fine Print
Most people now reading
· Bell Response to PIPEDA Request [TekSavvy]
· I'll Just Unplug That... [No, I Will Not Fix Your #@$!! Computer]
· SSD [Computer Hardware Discussion/Reviews]
· Only firefox accesses Internet? [Security]
· Newegg Black Friday Sale started [Users Find Hot Deals]
· 3.x Feral Druid - Bear Tanking Guide [World of Warcraft]
· [ Classes] Druid tanking: rotation and glyphs [World of Warcraft]
· Not strictly "Home" related - but WOW anyways... [Home Repair & Improvement]
· IPComms Free DIDs now with sip registration maybe?? [VOIP Tech Chat]
· Windows 7 boot manager editing questions [Microsoft Help]