no, nerds and pencil pushers were on the internet. social media on smartphones put The internet in everyone's hands, making the news headlines and social media front and center in their lives.
as for the iPhone, the uptick in the OP graph almost perfectly coincides with the adoption of smartphones.
no, nerds and pencil pushers were on the internet.
True of the time before AOL. By 1997, AOL had more than 34 million subscribers. These were not nerds and pencil pushers.
I had internet before AOL was big through services that only "nerds" would use. I watched the normie influx to the internet in real time. I was there for it.
social media on smartphones put The internet in everyone's hands
You're simply wrong, and you don't understand history.
"social media" started in a big way at scale with Friendster, and then Myspace got incredibly huge from 2005, then years later was displaced by Facebook in 2009.
as for the iPhone, the uptick in the OP graph almost perfectly coincides with the adoption of smartphones.
No it does not. The uptick is 2012, maybe back to 2010 at the earliest. Blackberries were very popular in the mid 2000s and were smartphones. The iphone came out in 2007.
AOL may have put more normie nerds on the Internet, but they were still nerds. 34 million is a minority chunk of the American populace. Yes social media did exist well before Facebook in the other Giants that we all know and hate today, but adoption was far from universal. The majority of people in America did not have any sort of online footprint except maybe for email. That changed with the smartphone, between 2007 and 2012 the adoption of personal computers that follow people around ramped up to the point where by the time you get to 2013 or 2014, almost everyone in the entire United States had an online footprint. That mass adoption changed the internet from being a niche thing, even a normie niche thing, to a ubiquitous thing that everyone was a part of whether they liked it or not.
As for the uptick, look closer: It starts just before 2009. this would have been a year and a half to two years after the iPhone with its very normie friendly interface released. back then, a year and a half was plenty of time for adoption to incubate from the early adopters to the mass market
uhm, iphone was 2007. normies were on AOL in the 90s and on friendster and then myspace even before the iphone
no, nerds and pencil pushers were on the internet. social media on smartphones put The internet in everyone's hands, making the news headlines and social media front and center in their lives.
as for the iPhone, the uptick in the OP graph almost perfectly coincides with the adoption of smartphones.
True of the time before AOL. By 1997, AOL had more than 34 million subscribers. These were not nerds and pencil pushers.
I had internet before AOL was big through services that only "nerds" would use. I watched the normie influx to the internet in real time. I was there for it.
You're simply wrong, and you don't understand history.
"social media" started in a big way at scale with Friendster, and then Myspace got incredibly huge from 2005, then years later was displaced by Facebook in 2009.
No it does not. The uptick is 2012, maybe back to 2010 at the earliest. Blackberries were very popular in the mid 2000s and were smartphones. The iphone came out in 2007.
AOL may have put more normie nerds on the Internet, but they were still nerds. 34 million is a minority chunk of the American populace. Yes social media did exist well before Facebook in the other Giants that we all know and hate today, but adoption was far from universal. The majority of people in America did not have any sort of online footprint except maybe for email. That changed with the smartphone, between 2007 and 2012 the adoption of personal computers that follow people around ramped up to the point where by the time you get to 2013 or 2014, almost everyone in the entire United States had an online footprint. That mass adoption changed the internet from being a niche thing, even a normie niche thing, to a ubiquitous thing that everyone was a part of whether they liked it or not.
As for the uptick, look closer: It starts just before 2009. this would have been a year and a half to two years after the iPhone with its very normie friendly interface released. back then, a year and a half was plenty of time for adoption to incubate from the early adopters to the mass market