Online Usage Plummets in Battered Gulf
      - Sep 2, 2005 07:39 PM (AP Online)

By BRUCE MEYERSON AP Business Writer


The statistics make it look as if someone just flicked a switch and 
turned off the Internet, and that's not too far from the hurricane 
truth. In the battered Biloxi-Gulfport region of Mississippi, where 
about 160,000 people might go online during a typical weeknight, 
Internet usage had fallen "below reportable levels" by Tuesday, 
according to the tracking firm comScore Networks.


The number of people logging on in New Orleans, usually 700,000 on an 
average weeknight, plunged 90 percent after Hurricane Katrina sent 
most of those Internet users fleeing and knocked out most of the 
telephone and electrical lines needed to connect any computer not 
submerged in the floods.


On a more heartening note, comScore also reported Friday that online 
traffic to the RedCross.org is soaring: On Wednesday, nearly 1 
million people visited the Web site, more than 32 times the average 
daily visit during the prior week.


The hurricane's impact was also evident on the nation's long-distance 
phone networks, where the number of calls has jumped this week. 
However, with millions of local phone lines out of service in the 
Gulf region, the number of long-distance calls that aren't reaching 
their destination has surged as well.

...

      - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=51562492


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