Roger Fidler, who first imagined the now arriving (2010) tablet newspaper in 1992 when he convinced the Knight Ridder Co. to underwrite the Information Design Lab in Boulder, Co., has always looked at the future of the newspaper business as primarily a production, manufacturing and distribution challenge.
But the biggest change is the fact that news must become personal, which is why I have since 1999 argued for the personal newspaper, a clunker of a term, no doubt.
Anyway, check out the video on this site to get a fascinating view on the history of the evolution/transition of newspapers in the 21st Century.
Like a diamond in the rough, Roger Fidler is a superstar.
Monday, December 28, 2009
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Post-Kindle
So we are now post-Kindle. Here come the digitized magazines WITH advertisemnts. Can newspapers be far behind? Hoorah. Last month Conde Nast demonstrated its concept of a digitized magazine tablet. Now it’s Time Inc.’s turn: The publisher is demo-ing an iteration of Sports Illustrated compatible with the "upcoming" Apple tablet and/or other tablets. Both publishers will offer add-ons like multimedia and links into the web. But it's the replica aspect here that may make the digitized business model work. Circ-based advertising sales will still work, we hope. And let's hope the magazines are beautiful en tablet.
Labels:
ndividuated news,
news you choose,
personalization
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