Also today, Knight-Ridder sold its newspapers
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Adapt to new technology or die,' Murdoch tells newspapers

2 hours, 43 minutes ago

LONDON (AFP) - The newspaper industry needs to embrace the technological
revolution of the Internet, MP3 players, laptops and mobile phones or face
extinction, media tycoon Rupert Murdoch said.
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"Societies or companies that expect a glorious past to shield them from the
forces of change driven by advancing technology will fail and fall," he said
in a speech to the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers.

"That applies as much to my own, the media industry, as to every other
business on the planet. Power is moving away from the old elite in our
industry -- the editors, the chief executives and, let's face it, the
proprietors.

"A new generation of media consumers has risen demanding content delivered
when they want it, how they want it, and very much as they want it."

Murdoch, whose News Corporation empire ranges from newspapers and magazines
to television and film interests across the globe, described the 21st
century as "the second great age of discovery".

The greatest challenge for the traditional media now is to engage with more
demanding, questioning and better educated consumers, adapting their
products for new technology, the Australian-born media mogul said.

"There is only one way. That is by using our skills to create and distribute
dynamic, exciting content," he said.

"But -- and this is a very big but -- newspapers will have to adapt as their
readers demand news and sport on a variety of platforms: websites, iPods,
mobile phones or laptops.

"I believe traditional newspapers have many years of life but, equally, I
think in the future that newsprint and ink will be just one of many channels
to our readers."

Murdoch sparked one of Britain's most bitter industrial disputes over the
introduction of new computer technology for journalists and printers.

In January 1986, he moved his British newspapers The Times, The Sun and The
News of the World overnight from their historic home on Fleet Street,
central London, to a purpose-built facility in Wapping, in the east of the
capital.

It was credited by some with not only breaking the stranglehold of print
unions on a hitherto unprofitable industry crippled by strikes but paving
the way for developments such as colour printing, supplements and websites.


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