If yes, let me know if you have the data analysis skills to dig into the
40,000 survey sample Computers and Internet Current Population Survey put
in the field by the U.S. government.

Or play around yourself with the micro data and share some results:
http://thedataweb.rm.census.gov/ftp/cps_ftp.html#cpssupps

Or dig into:
http://dataferrett.census.gov/

The data finally came out earlier this year.

Scroll down to:
July 2013 Computer and Internet Data File

The data sample is large enough to for example figure out which states are
serving lower income or minority groups better than others with
e-government services. Then we can ask why some states are serving more
people better than others and share what works so that e-government/open
government isn't just about serving the well wired even better while
leaving so many other behind.

Note 2011 survey analysis:
http://bit.ly/egovuse

Also note that in 2013, the survey went from asking essentially the
"householder" (the person who answered the door or felt most comfortable
answering I guess) to a random person in the household.

Steven Clift  -  Executive Director, E-Democracy.org
   [email protected]  -  +1 612 234 7072
   @democracy  -  http://linkedin.com/in/netclift

Also with Knowledge Hub - [email protected]
   World leading online public services exchange: http://khub.net
   Call # above or +44 203 808 1118  (After 13:00 UK time)

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