how the ownership of computers per family in a European country changed from 1997 to 2011.
how the ownership of computers per family in a European country changed from 1997 to 2011.
The provided illustration depicts how the ownership of computers per family in a European country changed from 1997 to 2011.
Overall, despite experiencing fluctuations at different levels, there were upward trends in the percentages of households owning a single computer, two computers, and three or more computers, but a downward trend in the proportion of households without this electronic device.
Commencing with computer ownership per household in 1997, one striking feature is that almost no families had three or more devices. The highest percentage was among households without any, at over 46%, followed by households with a computer and those with two, at just under 45% and approximately 5%, respectively.
A following observation reveals that the percentage of families with a solitary computer exhibited subtle fluctuations, concluding the period at precisely 45%, emerging as the predominant category among the four. In contrast, households with two computers and three or more, following a consistent pattern throughout the given timeframe, gradually rose to around 25% and 5%, respectively. Notably, only in two years between 2009 and 2011, did the former surpass the number of families without computers, becoming the second most prevalent group in the survey. Conversely, the figures for households without any computers saw a significant decline of about a third over the 14-year span, claiming its position as the third most ubiquitous category.