The New York Times' B2B Opportunity
The New York Times is likely to introduce institutional pricing now that it is beginning to charge for consumer access.
The New York Times is likely to introduce institutional pricing now that it is beginning to charge for consumer access.
Online news increases in popularity, online advertising grows, and an iPad newspaper pure-play exists — why does this all seem like bad news?
Wikileaks teaches us a number of lessons, the most important being that the world will change, whether we like it or not.
Despite hand-wringing about the Times UK’s paywall, the numbers show that revenues may have justified the move.
“Toxie” is a story based on facts, and worth waiting for. Why can’t the news media return to telling it like it is rather than playing to the narrative?
A video from practical people outside our little bubble gets it right.
The US Federal Trade Commission and Google spar openly over the future of journalism. Guess which one comes out looking more modern?
College journalists are more motivated about getting into print, editors are missing huge opportunities, and Harry Potter’s owners are in no hurry to go digital. What gives?
The New York Times wants federal regulation of Google’s editorial objectivity.
By realizing content links news outlets and creating a barter system, Scott Karp’s Publish2 offers an interesting approach to the “content graph” networked information has created.
Ah, nostalgia for when technology was cool in a completely different way.
Blogs, Twitter, and YouTube feast on traditional media, but they change the agenda for millions in the meantime, as a recent Pew study shows.
What we know is important, but how we interpret it is vital. Getting the NYTimes/PowerPoint narrative right requires a little more complex knowledge.
A short video tour of the Financial Times’ new iPad app — and a question.
A new Pew Research report shows that news media — print and broadcast — vary in their attitudes. But a deeper attitude about how the news should be presented may be their ultimate vulnerability.