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The image provides data on US internet searches, with a table indicating a total of 4.5 billion searches in November 2004 and 16 billion in September 2010, and a line graph showing the percentage of searches by different engines from 2004-2010. The graph's approximate data points are as follows: Google (Nov 04: 35%; Jul 05: 40%; Jul 06: 45%; Jul 07: 56%; Apr 09: 66%; Sep 10: 67%); Yahoo (Nov 04: 33%; Jul 05: 31%; Jul 06: 29%; Aug 07: 25%; Sep 07: 26%; Oct 07: 26%; Mar 08: 25%; Apr 09: 21%; May 09: 21%; Aug 10: 20%; Sep 10: 18%); Microsoft (Nov 04: 16%; Nov 05: 15%; Jul 07: 13%; Sep 10: 12%); AOL (Nov 04: 9%; Nov 05: 10%; Jul 06: 8%; Apr 08: 5%; Sep 10: 4%); and Ask Jeeves (Nov 04: 5%; Jul 06: 6%; Sep 07: 5%; Sep 10: 3%).
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The table chart illustrates total number of online researches, while the line graph gives information about the proportion of researches using google, yahoo, microsoft, acl, and ask jeeves engines in the US from 2004 to 2010. Overall, google dominated thruought the period, at the same time other categories remained unchanged but yahoo which decreased, with the most searches orginizing in September 2010.
Looking at the line graph, google stood at well under 40% but it increased significantly to about 65%, Yahoo began at the same level as Google but then dropped, at just over 20% in september of 2010. Other remaining categories stayed unchanged, they started with approximately 10% and in the end of the year it represented again around 10% in the US.
Turning to the table, the total number of US searches was significantly lower in November 2004 than in September 2010, standing at 4.5 and 16 billion respectively.
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