http://forum.dawn.com:91/dawnforum/2009/06/30/growing-pains-journalism-moves-from-print-to-web/

Growing pains: Journalism moves from print to web
Posted by Moderator in Technology on 06 30th, 2009 | 16 responses
DawnNews' Wired and Active show brings you this question of the week:



Are newspapers a thing of the past?

Journalism as we know it is undergoing a transition. Prestigious newspapers in 
the United States are losing up to US$ 1 million a week. It is estimated that 
in the coming year, eight of the 50 largest newspapers in the US will cease 
publication. Already, publications such as The Christian Science Monitor are 
publishing only on the web. And many news outlets are increasingly producing 
bite-sized news items - SMS headlines, short podcasts, two-minute videos and 
news feeds - to cater to the fact that most readers and viewers are now 
accessing the news using mobile, hand-held devices.

The shift from print to web has also sparked other changes, both good and bad, 
in traditional journalism. For example, internet-based softwares such as blogs 
force reporters and columnists to hyperlink to their sources, thereby reducing 
plagiarism and making journalists' sources transparent. At the same time, 
numerous research studies have shown that people consume less news online: the 
average internet user spends 56 minutes a month on news sites (12.6 minutes a 
week) while the average newspaper reader spends 12.4 hours a month (2.8 hours a 
week) mulling over column inches.

Given the increasing ease with which people can access the internet and the 
present-day culture of a 24/7 media world, do you think newspapers are a thing 
of the past? Does the shift from print to web make news outlets better or 
worse? Do you prefer reading a newspaper or clicking through a website to get 
news and other information? Will mobile technology change our understanding of 
news delivery systems?

The best responses will be highlighted on this week's episode of Wired and 
Active, which airs on DawnNews on Wednesday, July 1, at 8:30 p.m.


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