« student papers with a purpose | Main | "transliteracies" conference »
incredible shrinking newspaper
05.17.2005, 5:42 PM
Facing slipping circulation and massive migration to the web by younger news consumers, a number of top tier newspapers are switching from the traditional broadsheet format to the more handy tabloid, including the European and Asian editions of the Wall Street Journal.
But is this enough? One British advertiser remarks: "We want newspapers to come up with a solution to the threat of marginalization in a digitalized world. But they have to do more than just play around with the size of paper they're printed on."
The International Herald Tribune ran this story yesterday. I've plugged it before, but the IHT is noteworthy as one of the few online newspapers to eschew vertical scrolling for the layout of articles. Instead, they have simple, attractive (and I would argue, much more readable) horizontal scrolling across fixed, three-column plates. With its long vertical fields, you might say that web news, too, is stuck in the broadsheet model. The problem is that, unlike a print newspaper, a computer screen can't be folded to improve readability, or to isolate a desired area of the page.
Posted by ben vershbow at May 17, 2005 05:42 PM
tags: Publishing, Broadcast, and the Press, the_form_of_the_book
Trackback Pings
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.futureofthebook.org/32blogadmin/mt-tb.cgi/26
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference incredible shrinking newspaper:
» The Challenge Posed by Newspapers from the Synthetic Cafe
The drumbeat about the need for newspapers to adapt to compete for readers in this age of weblog, ebook, and the internet continues. [Read More]
Tracked on May 18, 2005 09:49 AM
» Feed Me: Bayesian News Filtering from Elegant Chaos
Josh Portway pointed out a post on the FutureOfTheBo
[Read More]Tracked on June 7, 2005 02:30 PM


