I recently came across the latest “Did You Know” video, version 4.0. It’s a really fascinating video which I think everybody who is interested in technology, media, and trends should see. The only problem is that the statistics go by so fast making them hard to really absorb. However, I managed to find the stats transcribed on Michael Hyatt’s blog (Thanks Mike!) which I will list below the video.

Here are the facts:

  • A surge of new technologies and social media innovations are altering the media landscape.
  • Convergence is everywhere. It is easier than ever before to reach a large audience, but harder than ever to really             connect with it.
  • These changes are affecting the way people behave. Are you ready for the future?
  • Well over 1 million new books are published worldwide every year.
  • A Google Book Search scanner can digitize 1,000 pages an hour.
  • Americans have access to:
    • 1 trillion web pages
    • 65,000 iPhone apps
    • 10,500 radio stations
    • 5,500 magazines
    • 200+ cable TV networks
  • There are 240 million TVs in the U.S.; 2 million are in bathrooms. When was the last time you read a newspaper in the      loo?
  • Newspaper circulation is down 7 million over the last 25 years. But in the last 5 years, unique readers of online newspapers are up 30 million.
  • This year (2009), traditional advertising revenue is in steep decline:
    • Newspapers advertising is down 18.7%
    • TV advertising is down 10.1%
    • Radio advertising is down 11.7%
    • Magazine advertising is down 14.8%
  • Meanwhile, digital advertising is growing rapidly:
    • Mobile advertising is up 18.1%
    • Web advertising is up 9.2%
  • 47% of broadcast television viewers say they would pay for ad-less programming.
  • More video was uploaded to YouTube in the last 2 months than if ABC, CBS, and NBC had been airing new content (with no re-runs) 24/7/365 since 1948 (which was when ABC started broadcasting).
  • ABC, CBS, and NBC collectively get 10 million unique visitors per month. These business have been around for a combined 200 years.
  • Myspace, Facebook, and YouTube collectively get 250 million unique visitors per month. None of these sites existed     6 years ago.
  • Forty million people have been Rickroll’d.
  • 95% of all songs downloaded last year weren’t paid for.
  • Wikipedia launched in 2001. It now features over 13 million articles in more than 200 languages.
  • Cisco’s new data switch could move all of Wikipedia in .001 seconds. Makes the wifi at the local coffee shop seem really, really slow, huh?
  • Not slow: Ang Chuang Tang of Singapore. He typed a Guinness Book of World Records-approved 160-character text         on his cell phone in 41.52 seconds. That’s about 4 characters per second. OMG!
  • Pop Quiz: how many text messages does the average teen send every month? 584? 1,150? 1,612? Nope. 2,272. Above Average: Brady James of Los Angeles, California sent 217,541 text messages in March 2009.
  • Nokia manufactures 13 cell phones every second. 1,898 since this video started,
  • Right now, 93% of U.S. adults own a cell phone. But ⅓ don’t feel safe using it for purchases—unless we are talking about pizza.
  • Dell claims to have earned $3 million via Twitter posts since 2007.
  • In February 2008, John McCain raised $11 million for his U.S. Presidential bid. That same month, Barack Obama attended no campaign fundraisers. Instead, Obama leveraged online networks to raise $55 million in those 29 days.
  • How are you using social networking sites?
    • Among larger U.S. companies, 17% have disciplined an employee for violating blog or messages board policies.
    • Twitter played an unprecedented role in sharing information during the 2009 Iranian presidential elections.
    • All mentions of the disputed election were bumped from Twitter’s trending topics list when news of Michael Jackson’s death broke.
  • Jackson, Swine Flu, and Barack Obama have been this year’s top subjects for malware distributing emails.
  • 90% of the 200 billion emails sent every day are spam.
  • The mobile device will be the world’s primary connection tool to the Internet in 2020.
  • The computer in your cell phone today is a million times cheaper and a thousand times more powerful and about a hundred thou
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