Post Office launches internet help guide

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Results of new research from Post Office Broadband have revealed that over seventy per cent of the British public tried to give non-Internet users lessons in using the web during the recent Christmas and New Year period. Whilst spending time with friends and family is one of the great highlights of the festive period, this particular activity often causes great stress and anxiety and lessons more often than not culminate in fights.

It is a well-known fact that you should never even consider teaching a close friend or family member how to drive, since the stress resulting from these lessons often leads to shouting matches. However, it now seems that teaching loved ones how to use the Internet is replacing teaching them to drive in the ranks of activities to be avoided at all costs. Thankfully, there now seems to be a solution to this problem. The Post Office has developed a new guide which aims to help Internet users teach their friends and family members how to use the web in an enjoyable and stress-free manner. This guide can be accessed online by following the relevant link located here.

It really is worth investing the time and effort involved in teaching those who are unable to use the web how to access the Internet. The research undertaken by the Post Office found that almost twenty per cent of those who do not use the Internet say they feel left out of wider society and the same percentage dislikes being denied access to public information located on websites, which Internet users simply take for granted. They are also being denied access to online deals with regards to numerous products and services.


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