SpartanTS
10-30-2005, 09:13 PM
Newspapers must go online or die
If newspapers are going to survive the internet age, they are going to have to capitalise on their credibility and local strengths while figuring out how best to make money from their new media. A panel at the Associated Press Managing Editors annual conference, which looked at the fact that print readership was plummeting faster than a free fall team of acrobatic lemmings, said there had to be change.
Lynn Dickerson, publisher and president of The Modesto Bee admited that the demand for print was not as high as it once was. However, she said that print was the last collective effort for democracy and had to survive in one form or another.
Panelists agreed that shifting online appears to be the most attractive revenue prospect. However they warned that while revenue from online businesses is growing, competition is fierce. Not only do traditional newspaper sites need to compete with each other, but also with an estimated 20 million people who news sites, bogs and other forms of new media.
However the panel claims that unlike online media newspapers print publications carry "a longstanding reputation of accuracy, fairness, credibility and independence”. No really.
They said that print's franchise is local news. It costs a lot of money and was the reason most people pick up the newspaper. Apparenlty their reporters are skilled at digging through paperwork at City Hall and other local reporting that the average blogger or online newspaper isn't interested in pursuing.
SpartanTS
10-30-2005, 09:14 PM
I subscribe to my local paper and WSJ. I rather have the paper in my hand than online.
Manntis
10-30-2005, 10:28 PM
I like to read the paper during lunch. It's cheap, portable, and it doesn't matter if I spill on it.
Is this thread even fucking serious?
Next post by babyniglet:
Landline phones must do something, cell phones are taking over!
rodney87
10-30-2005, 10:35 PM
I get the newspaper every day, and read it whenever I get the chance.
Manntis
10-30-2005, 11:11 PM
actually cellphones are taking over. As VOIP moves in, carriers are scrambling to shift their per-minute paradigm to portable calling a la cellphones... even though VOIP cellphones are on the horizon.
SpartanTS
10-30-2005, 11:27 PM
Vonage is the shiznit. :D I've had it for about a year now.
If i read the news on my computer in class teachers dont seem to mind. If i unfold a huge newspaper and fumble thru it I think it pisses them off.
Queen
10-31-2005, 12:28 AM
If i read the news on my computer in class teachers dont seem to mind. If i unfold a huge newspaper and fumble thru it I think it pisses them off.
:lmfao:
If i read the news on my computer in class teachers dont seem to mind. If i unfold a huge newspaper and fumble thru it I think it pisses them off.
good point.
Supper
10-31-2005, 08:30 AM
I haven't read an actual hard copy newspaper in years.
The only hardcopy anything i subscribe to anymore are magazines like Dirt Rider and Snowest.
Hell... I rarely even read online news sources anymore since Fark has become boring of late, it seems.
Animal
10-31-2005, 09:20 PM
Tehre's usually a newspaper or two in teh lunchroom at work. That's when I read it, mostly because it's nice to occupy your brain with something other than "damnit, noodle fell off my fork again... *chew*chew*chew*.... *swallow*.... these meatballs taste like crap... why do i keep buying these 88˘ frozen lunches..."
meddle
11-01-2005, 12:14 AM
I cancled my subscription to the p;ost dispatch over a year ago. I get the onion in hardcopy though. :)