Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/07/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Didier Ludwig offered: Subject: Re: [Leica] Re: NYT photo editor ted said: >>>My own feeling is, TV began the end of many news papers and magazines >>>simply because of the "as it's happening programming" offered rather than >>>the next day's news of papers. Didier responded: > I think the internet is even a bigger challenge for print medias. I have > been reading at least 2 different newspapers every day, and several > magazines a week, just as an indispensable habit, despite the concurrence > of the television. but since the internet came, things changed definitely. > for instance, this morning I have not found one interesting article in my > daily newspaper (Neue Z?rcher Zeitung) that I had not read yesterday (on > their website and on others).<<<<< Didier, No question, the internet has and is making a major mark in the publishing business, newspapers, books, magazines and almost every other form of printed matter. I suppose the only money making way they can keep profitable is charge a fee to enter the site as we see with some newspapers today. Not long ago I read an article pointing out many of the sites we receive at no cost will gradually become "pay for sites" simply because companies will eventually have to receive some form of financial compenstion rather than giving it away. Why? Well someone has to be paid to enter the information to the site and most corporations are not benevolent societies. Like you, before my morning paper arrives at 5.30 a.m., I've already read most of the major stories off the internet. So it's almost asking... "Why bother paying for a subscription when I can read it for free on the screen before the paper arrives?" That eventually leads to, cancel subscription! And if this occurs in large numbers somebody is going to be paying for what we read on screen sooner or later. Or the newspaper goes belly-up. Maybe? ted