Hi Tamar,
I agree. Reading a newspaper is more than just reading lines....in my case, it's a ritual. I brew my coffee, walk out and grab the paper, and then read it...all in a precise order. With the advent of the electronic media, most of what I read is already stale and...yet....it's a ritual; a habit - and one I don't care to break :-)
>>>One of the things I like about reading a newspaper as opposed to reading the news online is that I encounter things I wouldn't necessarily read online. I scan the whole paper (part at breakfast, part at lunch), stopping to read what catches my interest. I may read a paragraph of one article, a photo caption from another, all of a third. I just don't see an e-reading format lending itself to that kind of reading, at least not anytime soon.
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>>Tamar,
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>>What makes you think those things would no longer be available to you? An e-universe (sorry for the clunky invented word) will contain more information, not less.
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>As I said, not anytime soon. Someday, yeah, the format will get there, but I don't think we're close yet to e-readers that offer anything like the paper experience. When I think of all the places I open a book or magazine or newspaper, and all the different ways I read them, I think technology has quite a catch-up job to do.
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>I'll also point out that radio and TV were going to kill newspapers and didn't. TV was going to kill radio. VCRs were going to kill movie theaters. Etc., etc., etc. Instead, each technology finds its niche.
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>Tamar
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John Koziol, ex-MVP, ex-MS, ex-FoxTeam. Just call me "X"
"When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro" - Hunter Thompson (Gonzo) RIP 2/19/05