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Edinburgh: ‘IPod moment’ could render print extinct, predicts Guardian editor

Posted by Colin Crummy on 25 August 2007 at 16:33
Tags: Channel 4, E-paper, Edinburgh 2007, Edinburgh International Television Festival, Guardian, ITN, Journalism, Podcasting

The newspaper industry could be rocked by its own “iPod moment” where a device reads text so well that renders print extinct, according to the editor of The Guardian.

At a session entitled “Who’ll Win the Web?” at the Edinburgh International Television Festival, Alan Rusbridger said: “For the newspaper there will be an iPod moment where someone creates a device that is so brilliant at reading text, the newspaper becomes irrelevant.”

Rusbridger also said the death of The Guardian in print would “in some ways make life simpler” and said that he was confident his team would continue to produce the product within the same Guardian spirit elsewhere. “I’d be quite relaxed about it,” he added.

He admitted that The Guardian was tying up people experimenting with podcasts that gained few listeners but said it was because the newspaper was experimenting with everything. “There’s a fair amount of wasted effort at the moment but we’re learning all the time.”

The debate centred on whether print media or broadcasters might prosper in the digital age.

Rod Henwood, new business director at Channel 4 said: “In some ways we are less threatened than newspapers because free broadcasters don’t have paying customers to lose. We have paying customers to gain through the internet.”

He said that broadcasters could better retain exclusivity on products in a way that news providers could not. “News is very much commodised on the net. Immersive, long form video entertainment is harder to commodise. For broadcasters that have got rights that are their own, have a chance to stand out on the internet more than purely news providers.”

ITN chief executive Mark Wood said newspapers were more than just news and it was crucial to make those elements – like lifestyle sections - pay in a multimedia strategy.

Rusbridger said: “The BBC, CNN, ITN – it’s sort of an article of faith that they are impartial and unbiased. We can be as impartial and biased as we like and on comment is free we have thousands of robust opinions.” He foresaw this as “an interesting battleground” which would be partly settled by regulator.

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Additional links for Tuesday

Posted by Martin Stabe on 10 October 2006 at 19:57
Tags: 18 Doughty Street, Blogs, Daily Telegraph, Digg, E-paper, IPTV, Journalism, Sunday Telegraph, Telegraph.co.uk, Wikis

  • Virtual Economics: Exploding the myth of the read/write web
    Seamus McCauly looks at the latest evidence of “participation inequality” — the fact that a tiny number of heavy users produce most of the material on user-generated and interactive web sites
  • Shane Richmond: News from nowhere (part I and part II)
    Telegraph.co.uk’s news editor looks at the problems that the newspaper faces in the age of e-paper and unbundled content in the first part of a must-read essay. Part II has some recommended solutions.
  • Dan Gillmor frets that “most won’t listen” to Doc Searls’ list of 10 suggestions for online newspapers. Maybe in America — but isn’t most of what Searls suggested rapidly becoming the conventional wisdom in (most) British newsrooms? Besides, the most radical idea about what the web can do for journalism— Adrian Holovaty’s “news as structured data” theory — was missing from the list(s) of suggestions.
  • Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Susan D. Moeller and Moisés Naím remind everyone what really matters while all eyes are on Google and YouTube: “The fascination with the transformational effect of all this makes it easy to forget what is essential to the information process: traditional ‘old media’ messengers such as Anna Politkovskaya.”
  • 18 Doughty Street launches tonight at 8pm.

1 comment

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Additional links for Tuesday

Posted by Martin Stabe on 26 September 2006 at 17:24
Tags: Axegrinder, E-paper, Google, Journalism

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NY Times futurist predicts e-paper generation

Posted by Martin Stabe on 26 September 2006 at 16:29
Tags: E-paper, New York Times

The New York Times’ newly-appointed “futurist-in-residence,” Michael Rogers, predicts that the next generation of newspaper readers will have no “emotional attachment” to paper as the medium on which they read.

“Paper is a high-resolution, high-contrast, unbreakable and extremely inexpensive display device,” Rogers said in an interview with IWantMedia, predicting that it would not disappear as a news delivery platform for many years.
Within 15 years, though, he predicts that a “substantial part of our audience will have grown up already doing much more of their reading on screen, and they’re not likely to have the same emotional attachment to paper as does much of the current readership.”

The New York Times recently launched Times Reader, software that displays the newspaper on tablet PCs. Slate has a comprehensive review.

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E-paper: the full skinny

Posted by Lou Thomas on 23 March 2006 at 10:00
Tags: E-paper, Journalism, New Media

Where others dip their toes, PG jump right in and swim 50 lengths. Top tech site Gizmodo have a got a little info about one new way of checking out e-content on the Polymer Vision e-paper device but we’ve got it all and what their competition are up to.

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F-Paper confusion

Posted by Lou Thomas on 20 March 2006 at 14:54
Tags: Blogs, E-paper, International, Journalism, New Media

Confusion over at The Editors Weblog. The De Tijd trial is going out to 200 subscribers via e-readers (tablet-like devices that enable readers to access content).

Distinct from these are E-newspapers. These will be foldable and more like a traditional newspaper but getting news about reality-tv nobodies and Chelsea defeats on such products are a few years away yet.

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The Long Goodbye

Posted by Lou Thomas on 23 February 2006 at 11:40
Tags: E-paper, Newspapers, Online, RSS

It’s been a week since Worrying Alan at the Guardian ran away crying from Evil Craig Newmark but the spirit of Private Frazer from Dad’s Army lives on in US tech PR guru Steve Rubel.

According to Rubel us old-fashioned MSM (that’s MainStream Media for those at the back) types have a decade to wave off print but also need to push full print content on RSS feeds on our websites and beware the tide of e-paper.

This all raises plenty of questions so here’s two: Who’s next in the queue to give journalism a kicking? And will it be ten years, more or less until people start laughing about dead trees?

(Press Gazette’s RSS feed is here.)

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E-paper development: on a roll

Posted by Lou Thomas on 22 February 2006 at 11:52
Tags: E-paper

If you really can’t stand the ink on your fingers and sulk over the lack of interactivity print offers than the answer may be just around the corner.

E-books and e-paper are likely to be big news next year when the first colour versions of both will be available to Average Punter.

But Sci Tech Today’s claim of Fujitsu’s colour e-paper that “there’s no problem rolling it up” is at odds with what your humble correspondent has seen…

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