Census - American Community Survey - B28009 Presence of a Computer and Type of Internet Subscription
This set of Census tables shows the number of households with or without a computer, and whether and what type of internet subscription is used. Each unique table (B28009A-B28009I) contains details for a specific race or ethnicity category. The link provided is for B28009A, but remaining tables are available through the Census website's search feature.
Public
Methodology
"We ask questions about the computers and devices that people use, whether people access the internet, and how people access the internet to create data about computer and internet use. We added these questions in 2013 as a requirement of the Broadband Data Improvement Act of 2008. They help federal agencies measure the nationwide development of broadband access and decrease barriers to broadband access." (source: https://www.census.gov/acs/www/about/why-we-ask-each-question/computer/)
Survey, via mail to specific addresses
American Community Survey (ACS)
U.S. Census Bureau
3.5 million addresses nationwide are randomly selected each year to respond to the American Community Survey. The sample size indicated below applies to the nationwide sample size of housing units selected for final interviews rather than the filtered sample.
Random sampling method of data collection on a rotating basis, participants are legally obligated to answer all questions as accurately as possible. Privacy is protected by the Census Bureau. There is a 90% margin of error for the ACS in general, however, there is also a unique margin of error for each statistic.
The data is publicly available and may be used for cross-community comparisons by the public, journalists, educators, businesses, and various government and nonprofit agencies.
Analysis
Categories
Analysis
ACS does not explain how it defines or why it uses particular categories, other than to understand them better for service and program delivery and funding.
American Community Survey and U.S. Census Bureau
American Community Survey and U.S. Census Bureau
American Community Survey and U.S. Census Bureau
Interpretation
Computers and Internet Use