Well, on Olive's, anyway. Plus a quote from Waldo: "Simon Waldman ... says the online edition appeals to a niche market. 'It's people who have to get hold of previous copies of the paper or read the paper from overseas. It comes out of our own production system so we are not paying significant sums to a third-party vendor and we are perfectly happy with it, but it's just a part of an overall digital publishing strategy.'"
(From Press Gazette)
Saturday, July 30, 2005
Sunday, July 24, 2005
Saturday, July 16, 2005
"They are killing the paper boys"
Times plus Sunday Times amount to 1,550 pages per week (in a single edition/zone). In tabloid. The Guardian comes second. Adrian Pike, head of press at Starcom UK, who made the survey, reckons that when the Guardian goes Berliner, "if they present the same amount of words they will put in more pages which means they would be potentially huge products". Perhaps he hasn't noticed that the vast majority of the Guardian's pages are currently tabloid, i.e. smaller than Berliner.
(From MediaGuardian.co.uk)
(From MediaGuardian.co.uk)
Friday, July 15, 2005
The future is "semi-virtual integrators"
Eli Noam writes in the FT that news organisations will settle into two archetypes: 1, specialist content providers; and 2, publishers who for the most part operate by selecting content generated by many of the specialists and packaging it up along with a few dashes of content produced in-house.
(From FT.com)
(From FT.com)
Saturday, July 02, 2005
Friday, July 01, 2005
British Library's digital strategy
Research conducted for the British Library predicts that "by the year 2020, 40% of UK research monographs will be available in electronic format only, while a further 50% will be produced in both print and digital. A mere 10% of new titles will be available in print alone by 2020". So they're ramping up their digital material activity.
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