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Most Folks Say They'll Miss Their Print Newspapers If They Disappear

Survey Says 22 Percent Ditching News Papers for Internet
As more and more people get their news from the Internet, several long standing papers have closed up shop and gone online-only. We expect others to follow. However, a new study from the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication suggests that, although most folks increasingly prefer to read their news online, they don't necessarily want to see newspapers go away.

Of the 2,030 people surveyed, 22-percent had canceled a subscription to a print publication because they can get the same product online -- more often than not for free.

Still, the survey reveals a growing nostalgia for print, as 61-percent of those who read newspapers (both online and in print) said they would miss the print edition if it were canceled, up from 56-percent last year. According to the Audit Bureau of Circulations, sales of newspapers dropped about 7-percent in the last 6 months, clearly suggesting that the nostalgic crowd must not be missing newspapers too much (or else they'd be coughing up for subscriptions in greater numbers).

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Time, Sports Illustrated to Charge for (Some) Content

Print publications are hemorrhaging money while online ad revenue has cooled off. In this new environment, where consumers expect content to be provided for free, news outlets are still struggling to find a working, profitable business model that satisfies customers.

Time Inc., which is owned by our parent company Time Warner, announced on Wednesday that it plans to experiment with hybrid free/subscription models for providing content from some of its properties, including Sports Illustrated, Time Magazine, and Fortune. Free content will still be available, but some content will be made available only to paid subscribers within the next six to eight months.

Have other publications pulled off ad-supported content? The Wall Street Journal keeps certain stories behind a paywall, and people still seem to be willing to pay for that type of content. Whether this strategy works for other types of content remains to be seen. Another option that might see some experimentation in the near future is Walter Isaacson's suggestion in a recent issue of Time Magazine of micropayments and (very) low-cost online subscription fees for magazines and newspapers.

Whatever happens, it's becoming clear that advertising-only revenue models aren't working for publications, especially those trying to support a print publication in addition to online content. [From: paidContent.org]

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Computers

150-Year-Old Seattle P-I Newspaper Officially Going Online-Only

Seattle Post-Intelligencer Goes Online Only
...And the flood gates have opened. Print publications are now in full-on death march mod,e and it's only a matter of time before newspapers become like vinyl records -- odd relics that hipsters cling to out of a false sense of nostalgia.

Okay, so the chance that people will one day stack old, yellowing copies of the New York Times in milk crates around their studio apartment is pretty slim, but as more and more newspapers and magazines go online only --
or close up shop completely -- it's hard to imagine a future where print media is even half as ubiquitous as it is today.

Today, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer (or the P-I as it's known) became the largest newspaper in the U.S. to close its print operation and move online only. Its owner, print conglomerate Hearst, has been looking for a buyer for the troubled P-I for some time, but yesterday its deadline expired and the nearly 150 year-old print version of the newspaper was put out to pasture. The publication will live on at its Web site SeattlePI.com, but its staff has been cut to about 20 people, a mere fraction of the former 165-person operation.

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Computers

Trouble for Newspapers Spells Trouble for Cartoonists



With newspaper subscriptions continuing to decline, cartoonists are beginning to worry, according to a report in the New York Times. Speaking on the troubles besetting newspapers' print editions, 'Pearls Before Swine' creator Stephan Pastis told the Times, "For a syndicated cartoonist, that's like finally making it to the major leagues and being told the stadiums are all closing, so there's no place to play."

In response, some have decided to built their own stadiums; many cartoonists, and the syndicates that represent them, have taken bit in teeth and turned their attention to the Internet.

The United Feature Syndicate, which represents such comic strips as 'Peanuts' and 'Dilbert,' has begun offering its full archives for free via its Web site at Comics.com. Once the site's administrators did away with a previous paid subscription policy this past November, traffic to the site jumped by nearly half.

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Computers

Christian Science Monitor Cuts Print Edition, Fully Embraces Web

Christian Science Monitor Shifts Online
Over the past few years, online and traditional outlets have ran hyperbolic editorials heralding the death of print. And while we've seen newspaper circulation shrink and seemingly timeless magazines such as Rolling Stone take severe cost cutting measures, nothing has really signaled that the printed word was really on its last leg. That is until this morning, when the Christian Science Monitor announced that in April of 2009, it would be shifting its weekday publication to a purely online format.

The Monitor, which will celebrate its 100th anniversary on November 25, has won numerous Pulitzer prizes for its excellent reporting. In April of 2009, the weekday editions will move online, where reporters will be expected not only to file their articles but update them throughout the day as stories evolve. On weekends, The Monitor will print a weekend magazine with longer, in-depth pieces that might not be best suited for a Web-centric format.

The paper has said that the new move will allow it to avoid making drastic cuts to its work force and reporting while still delivering the same high quality journalism its readers have come to expect.

The shift to online publishing is the first sign that print -- at least newsprint -- might really be on the way out. Though not as popular as papers like the New York Times and the Washington Post, The Monitor is almost as highly regarded and is one of the few national news papers left in the U.S. that still has dedicated foreign bureaus.

It's been a good run. RIP Print Media, 1439-2009. [From: The New York Times and The Christian Science Monitor]

Google

Google Makes Old Newspapers Available Online

Google Makes Old News Papers Available Online
Google is continuing its march towards becoming the source for all the world's information.The search giant is expanding a program it launched in 2006 with the cooperation of The New York Times and The Washington Post to share those newspaper's archives. Now, Google is indexing and digitizing papers from around the country, including smaller local papers, which often don't have digital archives available online.

Now news junkies, researchers, and nostalgic Internet users can dig up old issues of their local paper without having to go down to their local library and break out the mircrofiche.

The papers are scanned and reproduced in PDF format and available in Google's online reader in their original format, complete with images and advertisements. The archives are currently relatively small -- not much more than the aforementioned dailies from New York and DC -- but Google plans to vastly expand its vault of digital papers and eventually incorporate them into its broader Google Web search so that when you search Google, you'll be searching the complete text of the new digital news archives. [From: The Official Google Blog]

Computers

E-Ink Newspapers Could Be Widespread By Late Next Year


Yeah, quite a few rags out there have already diverted at least some of their efforts to the electronic press, but according to E Ink's Ryosuke Kuwata, the trend is set to explode in late 2009. Said VP, who is currently in charge of market development, admitted that some newspapers in Japan, America and Europe are all looking to make the move to e-paper in the not-too-distant future.

He also stated that "verification tests" (trials, we presume) would be starting up "using several thousands of terminals by the end of 2008," and that the company would "gradually shift to a specific business in the second half of 2009." Reading the local headlines on e-paper, scooting to the market in a flying vessel and showing up to work by flipping on a hologram transmitter. Meatloaf always said two out of three wasn't bad.

Computers

Newspapers Likely to Become Free In Near Future, Says Editor Poll



All the news that's fit to print may someday be free, according to a new poll from Zogby International.

The polling firm asked newspaper editors around the world what they thought would be the future of newspapers, and most agreed that there was a future in print but that pressures from online media would force them to adjust how they do business.

Some key points:
  • 86 percent of respondents believed newsrooms should become more integrated with digital services.
  • Two in three believe the most common form of news consumption will be via electronic media such as online or mobiles within a decade
  • 56 percent of respondents believed that the majority of news, be it via print or online, would be free in the future (up from 48 percent a year ago)
  • 48 percent who answered yes a year ago
  • Only 45 percent of editors thought the quality of journalism would improve over the next 10 years (more than 25 percent think it will get worse)
  • Nearly two-thirds believe that some traditional editorial functions will be outsourced in the future

An interesting split between so-called emerging markets and more mature markets was revealed by the poll. Editors in South America, Eastern Europe, Russia, the Middle East and Asia were more likely to think newspapers would become free, while those in Western Europe and North America were likely to think the paid model still has a future. [Source: Reuters]

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