Understanding New Consumption Sites of Internet Cafe in Yogyakarta, Indonesia (original) (raw)

Cyber Café Usage in Malaysia: An Exploratory Study

Journal of Internet Banking and Commerce, 2009

Using empirical and new field data, this exploratory study investigates the pattern of the use of cyber cafes in two cities in Malaysia. The research was based on the convenience sample survey of 284 respondents in total in the two cities, Melaka and Miri in Sarawak. It can be argued that cyber café seeks to provide its customers with inexpensive Internet access in a comfortable environment. People of all ages and sex come to enjoy the unique, upscale, educational, and innovative environment at cyber cafe. This study investigates the rate of usage of cyber café by the respondents. The results of our study and the implication for future research are discussed.

Information dissemination in a developing society: Internet café users in Indonesia

The Electronic Journal of Information Systems in Developing Countries, 2005

The article analyses the market for Internet cafés in Indonesia and thereby studies the spread of information through the Internet in a developing society. The city of Yogyakarta was selected as the research site, due to its abundance of Internet cafés and customers. The empirical research is based on a survey comprising 270 users. Customers are typically young and educated. Males represent the majority of users but unmarried females are also regulars. User frequency is statistically associated with individual capability, electronic media exposure and financial capacity. Ten percent of customers' total monthly expenditures are on Internet cafés. Users represent a multitude of cyber cultures, and more research is needed to assess different preferences and motives for use.

Sociodemographic characteristics of young people using internet cafés

Cumhuriyet Medical Journal

The internet is a major phenomenon of today's society since it gives easy access to information. Internet use is becoming increasingly widespread, and area of use has been expanding. Based on figures from the Turkish Statistical Institute, home internet access was 41.6% in 2010 and increased to 83.8% in 2018. Despite increases in household internet access, use of internet cafés is also on the increase. The aim of the present study was to determine the sociodemographic characteristics of young people using internet cafés and the reasons why they prefer using internet cafes. Method: The study was carried out on internet cafés registered by Tokat Health Provincial Directorate. Written consent was taken from participants, and sociodemographic data questionnaire prepared by the investigators was completed by all subjects. Results: All participants and interviewed people were male. The average age of the participants was 20.1±2.34. Forty-two of them (70%) had home internet access, while 18 (30%) did not. The main reason for using internet café was playing online games (42 participants, 70%). The participants mentioned that they used internet cafés 2-30 days in a month and 1-16 hours on a day. Conclusions: In the present study dealing with the sociodemographic data of young people using internet cafés, it was found that people younger than 24 years prefer using these cafes and they could spend a considerable amount of time and money there. In addition, which web sites were visited and which online games were played by young people, how often and how long they used these public places were also questioned.

Communal computing and shared spaces of usage: a study of Internet cafes in developing contexts

ASIS&T IA Summit, Las Vegas, March, 2007

This paper shares the findings of a contextual enquiry into Internet cafés and their users in Johannesburg, South Africa. High densities of Internet cafés in less affluent areas of Johannesburg have been identified, which speaks to a need for computer and Internet access which is otherwise inaccessible or insufficient at places of home, work or study. Internet café users were found to have distinct patterns of use which are different to current mainstream and previously explored home or work users that feature in more affluent areas. The 'mainstream' functions in what we have begun calling a 'developed world paradigm of use and aspiration', in stark contrast to Internet café users who function in what we are calling a 'developing world paradigm of survivalism'. The findings and insights of this paper have implications for how we may understand the usage and value of the Internet and World Wide Web (the Web) in South Africa. Visitation to Internet cafés occurs with high frequency across a broad geographic space that follows areas of residence, places of work and transport routes between the two. The lack of a personal, private and persistent desktop, along with data storage, sharing of computers and the use of portable data storage devices, all have implications for how we should design and conceptualise experiences of web sites and Internet based services for the growing number of Internet café and shared computer users.

An Ethnographic Inquiry on Internet Cafés within the Context of Turkish Youth Culture

Contemporary studies have become interested in determining transformative effects of information and communication technologies on youngsters' social and cultural identity developments. Internet cafés are technosocial spaces where people access to digital media and interact with global cultural flows. Such interactions are profound because they fundamentally challenge diverse locality and traditional values. In this paper, we reports the findings of ethnographic research study as a part graduate thesis project about Internet cafés in Turkey. Our purpose was to find out how Internet cafés are being used by Turkish youth and how these sites affect their social, cultural, and educational experiences. We conducted intensive observations in three Internet cafés and semi-structured interviews with four college students. The results show that Internet cafés are being used mostly by male youngsters mostly for entertainment and communication purposes. Internet café usage are closely related to the emergence of techno-consumerist youth culture or lifestyle. This suggests that technology is more than a simple and neutral instrument that constitutes complex social and cultural dimensions which may involve profound alterations for people lives.

How Turkish young people utilize Internet cafes: the results of ethnographic research in Ankara

Observatorio (OBS*), 2009

We think that the Internet cafés in Turkey are the most cheapest places where the young people meet each other and socialize both in offline and online. Young people develop a tendency to utilize the same Internet café, and thus this using practice empowers already existed social networks among the young people. The Internet cafés are the places where game culture is promoted among the young people as well. This game culture contains two dimensional game related economy; firstly, the player has to pay per hour usage fee for the equipment (pc, microphone etc.), secondly, although the most popular games played at the Internet cafés are free to play, in order to survive within the game world the player has to invest in online economy by spending his/her real money. In this context, in the first part of the paper, a brief history of the widespread of the Internet cafés in Turkey will be summarized, and then, the findings of the ethnographic field study, conducted in Ankara at micro scale will be discussed. At the end of the paper, the development of new media literacy approach stemming from both critical pedagogy and critical media literacy theory, which gives responsibility to the user and the education process itself, will be suggested against the conservative technopolitics that recently aims to protect children and young people through controlling the content of the Internet and Internet cafés in Turkey.

The evolution of Ghanaian Internet cafés

Two main perspectives characterize current research on Internet cafés in the developing world. The "inclusionary" perspective represents these public digital spaces as the most important source of connectivity and inclusion for the global population. The "transitional" perspective represents Internet cafés as a dying business whose obituary is long overdue. This study describes a search for two dozen Internet cafés in Ghana, based on establishments first identified in 2003, accompanied by interviews with patrons and café attendants. Our initial exploration supported the transitional prediction that cafés would be shuttered or replaced by traditional businesses. However, an expanded search led us to the conclusion that "walking distance" replacements for all cafés remained available, supporting the inclusionary view. Qualitative interviews revealed the shift of cybers to business services and their continued importance as online spaces for disadvantaged populations.

Coffee Culture and Urban Settings: Locating Third Place in the Digital Era. The Cases of About Life Coffee Brewers in Tokyo and Kopi Tuku in Jakarta

Advances in social science, education and humanities research, 2021

By moving online to digital platforms, the idea of third place is blurred and, therefore, going through significant redefinition as the physical proximity and spaces for social interactions become less relevant. Historically, coffee shops have been a notable third place in many cultures and societies. Their meanings and roles evolve according to social norms, the need for flexible space, and the urban quality in their respective context. This study aims to illustrate such transformation by particularly looking into the impact of digital technologies on the emergence and existence of local coffee shops in two Asian cities, Tokyo and Jakarta. In less-organized urban settings such as Jakarta, digital platforms generate massive online food and beverage delivery services, including coffee. Meanwhile, in a well-maintained urban quality such as Tokyo, a certain degree of digital adoption helps promote coffee culture to a wider group of consumers and communities. Besides the influence of physical urban settings, the Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) adoption has also brought critical changes to coffee culture and coffee shop's presence as a third place. From our initial study, we conclude that, by leveraging ICTs and managing their physical arrangement, coffee shops can increase their place-making potential and maintain their third-placeness in the digital era.

Less Cyber, More Café

Organizational Information Systems in the Context of Globalization, 2003

Shared models access to information and communication technologies (lCTs), e.g. telecenters and cyber cafes, have been considered as one means to reduce the digital divide. Cyber cafes in particular have proliferated in some locales yet not in others with apparently similar characteristics. This paper questions the prevailing emphasis on the "cyber" characteristics of access, e.g. computing and internet access as is currently known, and attempts to refocus the conversation by considering computing and access in the context of the "cafe", e.g. as public life in the sense of Habermas. This analysis is based on extant literature and direct ethnographic research in several public places in six countries. We offer design perspectives based on a reflection of "third places" as inspiration for appropriate innovation in the provision of computing and communications.