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Internet Kills LA Times National Edition

Doc Ruby writes "The LA Times announced that it is folding its national edition on 12/31/04. The Times spokesperson said the paper's mission has been to reach 'key Washington, D.C., and New York audiences,' and that 'other electronic ways of reaching those audiences became more plentiful.' The folding edition will be replaced by "remote printing" by NewspaperDirect, and their email highlights, Top of the Times. Is this the way all our newspapers will be going?"

245 comments

  1. No by spac3manspiff · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is this the way all our newspapers will be going?"

    No, they're just targeting the wrong audience.

    1. Re:No by adeydas · · Score: 1

      i think this is a very self-sufficient way to reach the audience and i really don't say why other papers shouldn't follow it...

    2. Re:No by sammykrupa · · Score: 0

      " Is this the way all our newspapers will be going?" Some people like having paper.

    3. Re:No by Omniscientist · · Score: 1

      Its doubtful that all papers will be going this route, there is still profit to be made. As much as I read news online, you cannot beat a real newspaper simply because you read it on the fly. Only until more people own laptops and/or PDA's will we notice a significant overhaul of newspaper companies I think.

    4. Re:No by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 2, Funny

      you cannot beat a real newspaper simply because you read it on the fly.

      True. Then again, sometimes it's hard to read a real news paper because you've beaten it on a fly. Still very handy to have though.

      --

      The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
    5. Re:No by bit+trollent · · Score: 1

      Tell me you weren't just going for first post with a vaguely related comment to push that "free ipod" pyramid scheme in your sig. I can't believe somebody actually modded this obvious spam insightful.

      "No, they're just targeting the wrong audience."

      How long did it take you to come up with that gem you worthless spammer? Long enough to get first post?

    6. Re:No by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

      Oh please. Most government heads and corporate execs are in the age of 40 to 55. This is not a generation that grew up with hi-tech toys and Internet. If anything they fear the 20 year old tech elite's today. Wait another decade and issues like "reading on paper" or "banning video games" will all fall off the plate.

    7. Re:No by Stalks · · Score: 1
      Has a moderator removed the alledged "spam" from his post? I cant see the relevance to any iPod thing.

      Besides, you, the parent, to which im replying, should be modded as flamebait imo.

    8. Re:No by bit+trollent · · Score: 1

      The person I replied to has dutifully removed the spam from his sig after my reply. If I am modded flamebait it will be in the service of the greater good.

    9. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if you hate the news, it's totally worth subscribing to the Sunday newspaper just to get the coupons. I'm a college student living in SoCal and Ralph doubles all coupons (unless they say DO NOT DOUBLE) so the paper subscription pays for itself in like 1-2 trips to the grocery store.

      Plus you get color comics and a TV guide. =p

    10. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are literate enough to appreciate a newspaper, you are already online and do not need to kill trees.

    11. Re:No by Baricom · · Score: 1

      I believe there will always be a place for newspapers. They have a remarkable tendency to stay afloat even in the fiercest competition from more "exciting" and "modern" mediums. Take the saga of the Honolulu Star-Bulletin , which went from an abrupt 45-day notice of closure to its own offices and press.

      I won't be counting out the Times until they actually close. Granted, the Star-Bulletin and Times stories are radically different, but I wouldn't be too surprised if something happened at the last minute.

    12. Re:No by houstonbofh · · Score: 1

      Exactly. They need to look at why people buy the paper now. I buy it for the Fry's ad.

  2. first post by agraupe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    why does it matter that an LA paper gets to New York audiences in paper form? Furthermore, if you were in NY or DC, why would you buy the LA Times? What news do that have that local papers don't? (Surely there must be papers with both slants locally).

    1. Re:first post by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

      because most papers cover more than just local news and more viewpoint from more papers means you get more balanced news overall. I routinely read papers from all over the world though I live in NY. I do thisw online these days, but back when this paper was founded online wasnt a big thing, if at all.
      not to mention, what if you have family or business contacts or friends in LA but live in DC or NY, maybe you'd be concerned about the news eh?

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    2. Re:first post by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 1

      The Internet will replace all print media anyway. I don't understand people that still pay for a daily paper. It's just a massive waste of money when you can get the same information, even more actually, online on the web and it's updated within minutes vs. waiting around until the next day for your "news". If I had to rely on the newspaper to learn about the attacks on 9/11 I would've been clueless until 7am the following morning. With TV and the Internet I knew about it as the planes were hitting the building. Fabulous!

    3. Re:first post by CaptnMArk · · Score: 1

      I think weekly/weekend papers will stay for the same reason the books will stay.

    4. Re:first post by rf0 · · Score: 1

      I guess people in NY don't get enough scandel so they need something from Hollywook. An actress has put on 2lb. Wow!!!

      Rus

    5. Re:first post by eMartin · · Score: 1

      It's just a massive waste of money when you can get the same information, even more actually, online on the web and it's updated within minutes vs. waiting around until the next day for your "news".

      Not having constant updates is a plus for those who don't wan't to spend their whole day reloading sites like slashdot for fear of missing something.

      If I had to rely on the newspaper to learn about the attacks on 9/11 I would've been clueless until 7am the following morning.

      Maybe if you lived in the middle of nowhere and either had no family/friends or a telephone, but I'd imagine that those who live like that don't feel the need to always be up to date with current events.

    6. Re:first post by agraupe · · Score: 1

      Well, I still like crosswords and that sort of thing, not to mention I'm not always at an internet-connected computer. If google news could create a printable versions of the major news stories and some random puzzles, then I'd be switched.

    7. Re:first post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe that if you rely only on TV and electronic media to actually *understand* why these attacks happened, and their context, you would still be clueless... The depth of a newspaper editorial/article written by a knowledgable writer is irreplacable. Reading serious writing on screen is still, to most people, more difficult than reading it from paper. Maybe electronic paper will change that?

    8. Re:first post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What news do that have that local papers don't?

      2 words for ya:
      Holly Wood

    9. Re:first post by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 5, Insightful

      (Surely there must be papers with both slants locally).

      BOTH? Is the world limited to two viewpoints now?

      --

      The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
    10. Re:first post by pasde · · Score: 1

      Being from Montreal, I obviously read local newspapers like Le Devoir (www.ledevoir.com) or La Presse (www.lapresse.com) but I happen from time to time reading both the National Post (Candien wide edition) and the New York Times (New England Edition), mostly for their columnists, which gives me some point of view from my surrounding area. Local news is great but I need a bigger picture.

    11. Re:first post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I believe that if you rely only on TV and electronic media to actually *understand* why these attacks happened, and their context, you would still be clueless... The depth of a newspaper editorial/article written by a knowledgable writer is irreplacable."

      So when these writers transfer to electronic media are the suddenly clueless and replaceable? Get a clue, it's the writer that makes a piece interesting and not the media it's presented on. I also find the monitor screen much easier to read than a newspaper. If it's online I can alter the style sheet to suit me and even change the fonts incredibly easily. Furthermore, if there is another way to get the information without continuing to clear cut every major forest in the world I'm all for it.

    12. Re:first post by GileadGreene · · Score: 3, Interesting
      BOTH? Is the world limited to two viewpoints now?

      No. Just the US. Fisher's Deduction: "The more issues a person crudely shoehorns down into a liberal/conservative dichotomy, the more certain you can be that the person is an American"

    13. Re:first post by bitingduck · · Score: 1

      I think weekly/weekend papers will stay for the same reason the books will stay.

      Nah. I can even get the Fry's ads with the online version, and I don't have to sift through all the other ads that are stuffed into the paper version.

      Newspapers are mostly ephemeral- you want the current information and as current as possible. It's easier to keep up to the minute online, and if you're interested in the archival value of newpapers, online is easier to search.

    14. Re:first post by uptownguy · · Score: 1

      Nah. I can even get the Fry's ads with the online version, and I don't have to sift through all the other ads that are stuffed into the paper version.

      Newspapers are mostly ephemeral- you want the current information and as current as possible. It's easier to keep up to the minute online, and if you're interested in the archival value of newspapers, online is easier to search.


      Yeah, that's all true. Still, I think you're missing the grandparent poster's point all the same. There are times when I don't care about searching online or skipping ads. Times when you just want something to look at. A prop. Something to pass the time. This might come as a shock to you if you never leave your house/cube -- but there might just be times when the primary purpose of a newspaper is something other than "staying as current as possible." Times when you are sitting on the bus, in a coffee shop or (dare I mention it?) on the can. There are times when it might actually be pleasant to flip through the pages as you sip your latte or smoke your cigarette. And yes, I know, I know, it may be possible to someday get e-book readers that are light and portable and we'll all carry them -- I've read many books on my handheld and it really can be great in it's own way, it fills a niche -- but it is just a niche. I, for one, enjoy asking the person next to me if they are going to do the crossword, thank you very much, and I suspect that it will take longer than you think for a e-version of anything to replace that.

      Just my humble opinion, of course. I'm sure I'll get modded down for my tone or something...

      --


      I would have to say that explosives are the most abused technology in all of history.
    15. Re:first post by Dwonis · · Score: 1

      Both slants? WTF? How is this +5, Insightful?

    16. Re:first post by bitingduck · · Score: 1

      There are times when I don't care about searching online or skipping ads. Times when you just want something to look at. A prop. Something to pass the time.

      Yeah, that's about the only thing I use them for anymore, but it's usually one of the free alt-weeklies, rather than an LA times or something that would require me to find some quarters in my pocket. If I know that I'm going to have to kill some time (or have a high probability) I'd usually rather carry a book in my pocket. When I used to ride the subway a lot (in a city that actually had public transport) I usually had a couple of books in my pockets at all times.

      I totally understand your point, I just am less and less likely to use a daily for that.

    17. Re:first post by uptownguy · · Score: 1

      Glad we can find some common ground here. (What? Civility on Slashdot? Is this possible?)

      Its usually one of the free alt-weeklies, rather than an LA times or something that would require me to find some quarters in my pocket

      The problem with these, of course, is that they are weekly. If you find yourself killing time on a regular basis, you'll probably have the darn thing memorized the day after it comes out. Daily papers at least have new content each morning. Whether in a coffee shop or on the bus, I'm a big fan of reading the newspapers that others have left behind. This practice of mine, however, doesn't do much to bolster the argument that newspapers have a sustainable economic future... I am the ultimate free rider, relying on the propensity of others to discard something they no longer need, robbing publishers of potential revenue. Maybe, just maybe, online publishing -- coupled with DRM -- will allow those media giants to squeeze more revenue out of people like me in the future...? Maybe someday my actions will be seen as unpatriotic and/or criminal?

      Until then, I'll happily rifle through the recycle bin or pick up the daily on the seat next to me. The alt-weeklies have their place -- but they don't change quite often enough... or perhaps I just have too much free time...?

      --


      I would have to say that explosives are the most abused technology in all of history.
    18. Re:first post by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Clearly, you live in the suburbs.

      Newspapers are great for commuting. I can stand and read the newspaper on the subway. It isn't so easy with a laptop, and a PDA is just annoying to use with such a small screen.

      Interestingly, with 9/11, TV was a useless source of information for us in New York, since the WTC was where most TV antennas were based. The local newspapers however worked triple time to get the papers out the door as quickly as possible.

      They were equally quick with the Blackout in Septemer, 2003, running their printing presses on generators.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    19. Re:first post by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

      You're right about commuting, I live in NY too and a paper copy of anything is better for reading on the subway. However, I usually get my news online and read a book when I'm on the train.

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    20. Re:first post by tarp · · Score: 1

      Newspapers don't really make much revenue on the actual cost of the paper. It's the advertising charges that make up most of their profit. So you aren't really robbing them of anything. In fact, you're doing them a favor by reading their paper.

  3. Other electronic newspaper delivery: by XanC · · Score: 1
  4. This is news? by mat+catastrophe · · Score: 4, Funny

    Egon told us 20 years ago that print was dead.

    --
    sig not found
    1. Re:This is news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think of the rain forrest.

    2. Re:This is news? by rf0 · · Score: 1

      Same with the paperless office

      Rus

  5. Ah... the internet... by softspokenrevolution · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It can't possibly be that we already have enough newspapers on the East Coast?

    The internet is probably a good thing for newspapers, I doubt that it will become the be all, end all (though reading a broad sheet on the subway/train/bus is a bit of a pain). It's a great way to deliver content, to kep people apprised of things up to the minute, and it keeps our newsstands from being crowded.

    1. Re:Ah... the internet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention saves trees...

  6. Makes sense by Anubis350 · · Score: 2, Informative

    this makes a great deal of sense. Online news is a much better way of getting news and as it catches paper newspapers become less read. I get almost all my news online right now, its quiker, there's more news out there, its more current, and its easier to navigate.
    just my $0.02

    --
    "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    1. Re:Makes sense by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      And so much easier to read on the commute to and from work too. Oh, wait, that would be a paper newspaper...

      I agree that online news has many advantages, but don't discount the familiarity and portability of more traditional outlets. TV news channels didn't kill newspapers, radio news didn't kill newspapers, I doubt that the Internet will either, at least until 'net-enabled portables are ubiquitous, cheap and fast.

    2. Re:Makes sense by MoonFog · · Score: 1

      The key point for me is that you get updated news constantly. I mean, the newspapers report what happened yesterday (more or less), online, you get what happened today and what is happening. Also, there's just as much ads in a paper version as an online version.

    3. Re:Makes sense by EpsCylonB · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That is a strength of newspapers too, they have the time to make reasoned, thought out comments about what has happened the previous day.

    4. Re:Makes sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Newspapers that I've read have had some of the most uninteresting, misinformed, and difficult to understand articles I've ever seen. I often wonder if they even have editors anymore or if they just have spell check automatically fix a few spelling mistakes (and substitute several improper words) and call it good. They even did spell check on the name of a highschool which then became Centrifuge highschool (which is not even close to the correct name).

      And think of the trees!

    5. Re:Makes sense by egommer · · Score: 1
      That is a strength of newspapers too, they have the time to make reasoned, thought out comments about what has happened the previous day.
      ... or what they would like you to see happen the next day.

      --
      Two Towers-Two Worlds.One seeks triumphs and freedom for man.The other deems man unworthy and wrecks them.
    6. Re:Makes sense by AntsInMyPants · · Score: 1

      The time, but rarely the inclination...

  7. Re:Please help me with windows! by spac3manspiff · · Score: 2, Funny

    In other news:

    Internet Kills local user's Windows XP Home

  8. digitalization of information by Almond+Paste · · Score: 0

    I'm sure all slashdotters must be appalled by this!

  9. yes, but if newstands have to close down, by way2trivial · · Score: 3, Funny

    where on earth will I get my porn?

    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
    1. Re:yes, but if newstands have to close down, by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      The internet is your savior again. Hell, they can even combine late breaking news with boobs if they so desired(nakednews.com can, but they alas lack up to the minute news coverage). Now if only you could get candy and pop through the internet, there would no longer be any need to go to a newstand again.

  10. In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Slashdot reported today it will start a print edition.

    1. Re:In other news... by The+Ultimate+Fartkno · · Score: 2, Funny

      "The new technology journal has been experiencing slow sales. Industry peers suggest that it may be because they have now published seventeen issues with the cover story "FRIST POIST!!1!ONE!"

  11. Electronic Paper by rf0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What we really need is a nice method where all your news is synced to your PDA automatically every morning so you can read it on the way to work. However as much as I like electronic media you can't beat a real news paper sitting in the sunshine or in front of the fire

    Rus

    1. Re:Electronic Paper by MoonFog · · Score: 1

      One of the ideas behind the Semantic Web is an integration like that. here's an interesting paper from Tim Berners-Lee on the idea behind it.

    2. Re:Electronic Paper by themoodykid · · Score: 1

      Can't you do this now with RSS and a regular old PDA running some aggregator software?

    3. Re:Electronic Paper by ajna · · Score: 1

      AvantGo has been around for quite a few years now, and seems to be what you're describing. I didn't find it overly useful on my Nokia 3650, since I could just fire up Opera for Series 60 and head directly to the BBC News's low-graphics HTML site (or the WAP version if I was in a masochistic mood), but it seems to be the ticket for devices without network capability.

    4. Re:Electronic Paper by j0d3r · · Score: 1

      However as much as I like electronic media you can't beat a real news paper sitting in the sunshine or in front of the fire
      ---
      Although tossing a PDA into the flames would probably be a lot more exciting.

    5. Re:Electronic Paper by singularity · · Score: 1

      About a month ago I started using AvantGo on my Palm (Sony Clie, actually) for my 45 minute commute to work.

      Syncs with New York Times Top Stories, Business, and Technology news. I also have it syncing with Reuters, which actually gives a better column at times. The coverage is more complete, at least.

      Those two channels pretty much fill up my commute. I also have C|Net and a couple of others. More than enough news for most any commute.

      It is not perfect, but it is free and it works.

      Between that program, Vidigo, Metro, and MBTA on Palm my Clie is a very valuable resource commuting and just going around town.

      If only Sony was still making them...

      --
      - (c) 2018 Hank Zimmerman
    6. Re:Electronic Paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NewsStand will do that

    7. Re:Electronic Paper by Epistax · · Score: 1

      However as much as I like electronic media you can't beat a real news paper sitting in the sunshine or in front of the fire

      Well, seeing how I don't have a fireplace, I'd much prefer the electronic one.

    8. Re:Electronic Paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "However as much as I like electronic media you can't beat a real news paper sitting in the sunshine or in front of the fire"

      Yeah, tell me about it. PDA's don't burn as well. Inconsiderate Clods!!! What are we hobos suppose to do now for warmth in the winter?

  12. No. by northcat · · Score: 1

    Is this the way all our newspapers will be going?

    No, not until our monitors can display resolutions as high as printed material.

    1. Re:No. by Colourspace · · Score: 1

      Who cares about resolution? I can still read arial/times new roman/wingdings just as well and even with its soul sucking reg I aint getting the NYT anywhere else here in the UK.

    2. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Newspapers generally carry photographs as well as text.

    3. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And to think, I couldn't see a single photo on any computer all these years...

    4. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, not until our monitors can display resolutions as high as printed material.

      If only you knew that resolution didn't matter at all.

      Print detail is roughly 280 Dots Per Inch (dpi). That's because it's the minimum you can do before the human eye notices defects/inaccuracies. Anything over 300, and the eye doesn't register any difference between a 300 dpi and 3,000 dpi sampling. It's not even applicable to Internet/websites, which on PCs is actually 72 dpi (Macs are higher IIRC) - it's not being printed to paper. [That's why a 1600x1200 image takes up most if not all of your screen when you view it.] Even when it is, the text (unless you're still on dot matrix) is crisp enough - images aren't noticably degraded either. Print off a page and compare to newsprint.

      If you're talking screen resolution AKA real estate - invest in a decent size monitor. It's not the paper's fault...

  13. Bias Kills Newspapers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    The problem with the "Los Angeles Times" and the "New York Times" is that most Americans perceive them to be biased. For example, the Abu Ghraib story ran 19+ times on the front pages, but the story about Saddam Hussein's torture of women and children ran far fewer times. Both newspapers are experiencing declines in readership.

    Now, note that the "Washington Times", the "Wall Street Journal", and the "Economist" have experienced increases in circulation. The last journal, in particular, has experienced strong growth.

    Similar comments apply to Fox News.

    The conclusion is that less bias means greater popularity and larger numbers of subscribers.

    1. Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem [phrusa.org] with the "Los Angeles Times" and the "New York Times" is that most Americans perceive them to be biased. For example, the Abu Ghraib story ran 19+ times on the front pages, but the story about Saddam Hussein's torture of women and children ran far fewer times.

      Wow, so they suffer from the same accusations as Slashdot of being too US-centric?

      I would have taken it for granted that crimes by the US government would be of greater interest to the US public than crimes by a foreign dictator and would get more US press attention. Guess my vision is too narrow.

      Were they upset by the massive coverage of the US elections in those publications compared to coverage of the Norwegian elections as well?

      --

      The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
    2. Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I saw "Washington Times" implicated as unbiased and stopped reading.

    3. Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 3, Insightful
      For example, the Abu Ghraib story ran 19+ times on the front pages, but the story about Saddam Hussein's torture of women and children ran far fewer times.

      The news wasn't that torture was going on in the world. The news was that the USA (you know, the "good guys") was joining in on it.

    4. Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. by kalidasa · · Score: 0
      I suppose you are saying that all conservative publications are growing in circulation, even anti-Bush ones. The Economist reluctantly endorsed Kerry in the last election. It explicitly cited the Abu Ghraib prison scandal as one of its reasons:

      But that remains ahead, and meanwhile Mr Bush's credibility has been considerably undermined not just by Guantánamo but also by two big things: by the sheer incompetence and hubristic thinking evident in the way in which his team set about the rebuilding of Iraq, once Saddam Hussein's regime had been toppled; and by the abuses at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, which strengthened the suspicion that the mistreatment or even torture of prisoners was being condoned.

      Claiming that the Rev. Moon-owned Washington Times, the long-time Conservative lap-dog The Wall Street Journal, and most especially Fox News (which Rupert Murdoch explicitly founded as a right-wing news channel) are "less bias[ed]" simply reinforces the perception of your poor judgment one would form from your bizarre claim that running stories about Abu Ghraib would affect a newspaper's circulation to its detriment while at the same time singling out The Economist for "experienc[ing] strong growth." (By the way, the magazine that published the source material for most of the Abu Ghraib stories, Seymour Hersh's superb series of articles, the New Yorker, saw its circulation increase to 1,000,000 for the very first time in its 79 year history.)

      So I think we can all pretty much assume that you have no idea what you're talking about. By the way, you know how many times the Abu Ghraib story ran on the Times front page - not sure where it appears on this Physicians for Human Rights page about Tibet which you cited, nor could I find anything on their page about Abu Ghraib - I would guess that the link here is a red herring. What I really want to know, though, is where you got your figures for how many times Hussein's very real acts of genocide (hey, look, Physicians for Human Rights were talking about Hussein's use of weapons of mass killing back in 1993, and they talked about Abu Ghraib!), extra-judicial execution, torture, violence against women were covered. I was not surprised to see that you have no figures or links to back up your assertions on that! I chose to link to Amnesty International coverage, by the way, because they are an organization that was heavily criticized for its response to the Abu Ghraib scandal as being too liberal and ignoring Hussein's mistreatment of the Iraqi people.

      This is not a competition, "whose the bigger torturer?" This is not a case in which we can apply a calculus of torture and murder and use of weapons of mass killing and determine that so much torture in Abu Ghraib is justified because we are preventing the far greater tortures that Hussein committed. President Bush himself denounced the abuse of US prisoners at Abu Ghraib. Do you wonder why? It's because he at least realizes that the US has a responsiblity to rescue the people of Iraq from Hussein in a way that will not make them think there is no qualitative difference between us and Hussein, only a quantative one - which is something some of his most ardent supports do not seem to grasp. And people think GWB is stupid!

      The US can

    5. Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the thing. Educated people here really like specifics. Other people like general summaries of their news. You've gone general, so educated people like me don't give a fuck about your accusations.

    6. Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 1

      You've gone general, so educated people like me don't give a fuck about your accusations.

      Since I didn't make any accusations, it's probably fortunate that you don't give a fuck about them.

      --

      The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
    7. Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

      All the major newspapers seem to carry the same stories. Nobody seems to dig for the real truth or the opposing viewpoint anymore. As a result, I've totally lost interest in newspapers - paper or electronic.
      Give me a newspaper that shows both sides of every story.
      If I'm going to get crap news, I might as well get free crap news. If I get different, interesting news, I'll be willing to pay for it.

    8. Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...duh...more 'educated' commentary? I'm really impressed by such incontrovertible logic! What piercing analyses...just imagine how many dollars it took to produce this Einstein.

    9. Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      Once again, the only response to a detailed factual posting is an "overrated" (and hence un-metamoderated) moderation. Those of you who are doing this should realize that it is reflecting upon the courage (or more precisely *lack* of courage) of your partisans, especially when dealing with facts. So here it is again (I'll happily burn karma to get out the truth): the Abu Ghraib story was primarily investigated by Seymour Hersh and published in The New Yorker, and The New Yorker reached 1,000,000 circulation for the first time in the same period in which those articles were published. So no, reporting Abu Ghraib is not likely to cause anyone's circulation to go down. Why anyone would object to reporting on Abu Ghraib, when the president himself has wisely condemned what happened there (disproving once and for all the claims that he's stupid), is beyond me. Now, go ahead, mod me down with another "overrated," so you can prove that the only way you can win in the court of public opinion is by trying to prevent people from hearing the other side of the argument.

  14. What next? by Jonny_eh · · Score: 1

    Internet kills music industry Internet kills the movie industry Internet kills phone dating services Internet kills libraries Internet kills puppies, just the cute ones

    1. Re:What next? by Almond+Paste · · Score: 0

      Internet kills ./

    2. Re:What next? by RollingThunder · · Score: 2, Informative

      According to FARK, it also assists in killing kittens.

    3. Re:What next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Internet kills girlfriends (who needs them with the pr0n on the Net?)

    4. Re:What next? by aurb · · Score: 1

      Internet, you bastard!

    5. Re:What next? by spenot · · Score: 1

      Yeah, see kittenkiller.org for details =)

    6. Re:What next? by sf2turbomaster · · Score: 1

      Yes! Finally it is clear to you! That is exactly what we have been tryin to tell you for so long. Now we know our marketing and legal campaign is indeed working. MP**, RI**, etc.

    7. Re:What next? by braindump · · Score: 1
      Internet kills puppies, just the cute ones
      The Internet doesn't kill puppies (or kittens) it's your disgusting addiction to masturbation which accomplishes that. Remember, every time you whack off you kill a cute little kitten (or puppy, if you're jerking off in a public toilet) It's come down to this, then.
      --
      Ah, fuck it
  15. Lots of papers probably having this problem... by nathan+s · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I know I fall into the demographic that reads news nearly exclusively online, but I think this is just going to increase as paper-readers age and kids watch their parents (my generation) reading it online.

    Frankly, papers are unwieldy; I'm always getting them out of order or tearing them, not to mention that they store germs quite well (so I hear) - no picking those up on the subway for me!

    I think the biggest paper-killer, though, is that by the time the news is printed and in your hands, it's out of date. For local news where not much happens (or if it does, everyone immediately knows), a paper might still work - but for national/international news, it just lacks the immediacy of online news sources.

    1. Re:Lots of papers probably having this problem... by rf0 · · Score: 1

      But what about the other things you get with the paper. Crosswords, TV listings which you can browse at your lesiure. From a news point of view I take you point and agree but some of the other things papers give does really make them worth while. I don't thinkl we will be seeing the back of print media for a while

      Rus

    2. Re:Lots of papers probably having this problem... by nathan+s · · Score: 1

      For crosswords, I usually stop at this site or buy a crossword book. TVlistings? Browseable, searchable for my area at canada.com - that even works better than a newspaper because you can search days in advance. (And it's free!) Editorials? Hah. Editorials = blogs, in my opinion. And the advertisements/classifieds have their (superior) web equivalents as well.

      No, I honestly think that the newspaper is outdated. When I can afford a wireless handheld PC and WiMax or some other wide-area standard gets going, that means I will have all of this in expanded edition at my fingertips, without the hassle of papers, papercuts, and recycling.:-)

    3. Re:Lots of papers probably having this problem... by pjt33 · · Score: 1

      I generally keep up-to-date with online news sources, but nearly every time I travel by train I buy a newspaper to read on the train. You can read a paper newspaper while going through a tunnel. I'd go so far as to say that as long as commuting by train remains popular (as it is in the UK, at least: I know plenty of people who commute 50 miles to London each day by train) and most people don't have a laptop with a cheap mobile phone Internet connection there will be a market for hard-copy newspapers.

    4. Re:Lots of papers probably having this problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not to mention that they store germs quite well (so I hear) ....And keyboards, mice and mousepads don't?

  16. Re:Please help me with windows! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Fixing your computer:

    1) Unplug everything connected to it.
    2) Neatly repack everything in their original box.
    3) Return computer to place of purchase, demand a refund due to "user error", insist that the sales person told you that "utter incompetence" was covered under the warranty.
    4) ???
    5) Profit!

  17. well by Master_T · · Score: 1

    They wanted desperately to compete with the NY times and all the other rather strong newspapers in the area with with their watered down version of a paper that is meant for people in LA. I wonder why no one wanted to read it.

    What the LA Times was trying to do would be like Linux developers to trying to find their niche among old people.

    1. Re:well by kfg · · Score: 1

      What the LA Times was trying to do would be like Linux developers to trying to find their niche among old people.

      I believe this niche is often called "Linux Developers."

      KFG

    2. Re:well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You Mean:
      "What the LA Times was trying to do would be like Linux developers to trying to find their niche among Korean old people"
      HTH

  18. Re:Please help me with windows! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I sure hope we're not turning into dslreports now....

  19. Bastard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You killed LA Times National Edition. You bastard!!

  20. The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by glennrrr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's look at the newspapers which are making a go of it with nationwide printings: USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, and the NY Times.

    USA Today - Marketed at travelers who might be interested in a snippet of hometown news. The McDonalds of newspapers.

    The Wall Street Journal - Business oriented coverage with a solid conservative editorial page. The newspaper for Republican men.

    The New York Times - Amazingly diverse coverage and in depth coverage, with excellent coverage of the Arts and a predictably liberal editorial page. The newspaper for literate urbanites.

    The LA Time could have looked for another niche, but they basically are a poor clone of the New York Times. I used to read it quite often when I worked in LA and there is nothing about it that would recommend it over the other Times. Their whole market would be lonesome Southern Californians wanting to keep up with the music scene in Santa Monica.

    It'd be nice if another newspaper could challenge the WSJ or the NYT for nationwide coverage. The Chicago Tribune and Washington Post have the potential to do so; I think the Post has the best liberal editorial page in the country, and the Trib is just a solid paper, but there is only so many people in the market for national papers.

    1. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by ThousandStars · · Score: 1
      The Wall Street Journal - Business oriented coverage with a solid conservative editorial page. The newspaper for Republican men.

      I disagree with your assessment that the WSJ is for "Republican men." Its front page has among the most interesting, timely and unique stories of any news source in the country, and its Marketplace is valuable not only to corporate types, but those interested in what's going on in the greater American commericial sector. The recently launched Personal Journal and older Weekend Journal specifically target women. The front page and Marketplace articles are gender-neutral, so far as I can tell.

      Certainly the editorial page is conservative, but that doesn't mean it the columns and signed editorials don't present a range of opinion views. There have been a spate of articles from leading Democrats about how to take back political power from the Republicans. The editorials on fiscal policy often don't come from a particular political point of view.

      I read the WSJ and NYTimes on most days. I'd say they tie for best paper in the country, because they're sufficiently different that it is difficult to compare them.

    2. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by caswelmo · · Score: 1

      You're an editor for WSJ, aren't you?

    3. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by bitingduck · · Score: 1

      5 or 6 years ago I would have agreed that the NYTimes is substantially better than the LATimes. Lately I'm not so sure. I think the turning point for the NYTimes was the Wen Ho Lee thing at Los Alamos, where the NY paper practically convicted him on the front page. The LA paper was better about just reporting the news, and being more skeptical about unproven claims.

      Then again, maybe I've just been in LA to long...

      As far as closing down the national edition-- it makes sense to me. I'm local and I read it online. If I lived somewhere else I wouldn't buy a paper copy.

    4. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The New York Times as the newspaper for "literate urbanites"? I think it's clear you're a liberal; your post seems biased.

    5. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by Saeger · · Score: 1
      It'd be nice if another newspaper could challenge the WSJ or the NYT for nationwide coverage.

      Isn't that what the meta-newspaper has done? I haven't bought a deadtree-paper in years thanks to the Yahoo & Google News aggregators. I think it's clear that this is the way things are headed, but the old way still has a lot of intertia.

      It's nice being able to get news from all over the world. Since ALL news is biased you have to be able to go to more than once source in order to triangulate the truth.

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    6. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by ThousandStars · · Score: 1

      Yes.

    7. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You left out the Washington Post - Hates China more than Hitler, detailed, resists national distribution, and has more comics than any other print newpaper in the US.

    8. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by ThousandStars · · Score: 1
      It's not only the Wen Ho Lee thing; the NYTimes also had the Jayson Blair problem, as well as one other less-publicized example of journalistic malfeasance, although the name of the other guy escapes me.

      Anyone who is interested in the Times' problems, which may or may not have been solved (depending on to whom one lisetns) should read Howell Raines' article in the Atlantic.

    9. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by bitingduck · · Score: 1

      ... the NYTimes also had the Jayson Blair problem, as well as one other less-publicized example...

      Yeah, I almost started to put down the litany of things that have caused me to look more skeptically at the times, but the Wen Ho Lee thing was the turning point.

    10. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by glennrrr · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'm a suburban libertarian, and have given up actually reading the NY Times's editorial section as it is so utterly predictable, and intellectually dishonest. My favorite papers are the WSJ (to which I subscribe online) and the Washington Post. I was just trying to list where I perceived the paper's themselves positioning themselves, and being objective about it.

    11. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by ifwm · · Score: 1

      No wonder it sucks

    12. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by BushIsEvil · · Score: 1

      I love the NYT, it's so much better than the NY post. Just the other day, the NYT had a great article about how George W. Bush has not captured Osama bin Laden so that oil companies, white men, and Rush Limbaugh could offend Al Franken.

      --
      George Bush Banned my IP Address!
    13. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by tarp · · Score: 1

      +5 Insightful?
      The guy makes a cheap stab. "Literate urbanites". Sorry, but literacy is lowest in the republican red states.

    14. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by joepress · · Score: 1

      Newspapers have always been a local media. In the age of the internet it is even more so.
      National advertising - which would fund a national newspaper - does not focus on newspapers.
      The lowest rated network TV show can provide more eyeballs than the highest circulated newspaper.

    15. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by roju · · Score: 1

      Mmmm least-squares news.

    16. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by obender · · Score: 1

      FYI The Chicago Tribune owns LA Times.

    17. Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Sorry, but literacy is lowest in the republican red states."

      No, it's clearly lowest on Slashdot, which spans state (though not political) boundaries.

  21. Blame the Internet by nurb432 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Seems to be a rather popular scapegoat for companies with poor ( or outdated ) business models these days.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Blame the Internet by BoomerSooner · · Score: 1

      Yes and no, the internet is a major cause in outdated business models. The same as telephone killed the telegraph. It doesn't make it any less true that it may have been a good model until the internet took it away.

    2. Re:Blame the Internet by mrtroy · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well the Internet did kill the video star...

      It was only natural, video had been asking for it ever since it killed the radio star.

      --
      [I can picture a world without war, without hate. I can picture us attacking that world, because they'd never expect it]
    3. Re:Blame the Internet by rf0 · · Score: 1

      But surely by acknologing the internet they are changing their business model and therefore keeping up

      Rus

    4. Re:Blame the Internet by Depris · · Score: 1

      "------ What part of "the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed" do you not understand ----"

      the comma.

      --
      I'll make you a deal. You pray to God for help and I'll stop the moment he shows up.
    5. Re:Blame the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole amendment is:

      "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."

      Grammatically it makes no fucking sense.

    6. Re:Blame the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It does if you upgrade comma use to modern conventions. "A well regulated Militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed."

  22. Online News Rule by Space_Soldier · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I only read online news. First, I get to read news for free since I don't have to buy the paper, but more importantly, I save time. For example, on CNN or any other news channel, they'll announce a story that you really want to hear as "coming up after the brake." After the brake, they'll go to something else, then something else, and so on. It will take 30-40 minutes before one sees that story. 24 news channels talk a lot with saying nothing, and you also have to see a ton of commercials. Online I can read the story, hear the story, and view the story wihouth having to wait on them and their commercials.

    1. Re:Online News Rule by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if it's "coming up after the brake," and you missed it then you didn't brake hard enough. if, however, it's "coming up after the break," then technically it did come up after the mentioned break.

    2. Re:Online News Rule by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BBC News 24 -- No adverts from the Beeb

  23. dead trees by PerlDudeXL · · Score: 1

    I like to read news on the internet (mainly those of larger national and internatial newspapers), but I won't
    cancel my newspaper subscription. Its just nice to read in a real newspaper while commuting.
    The internet can't replace that. I even started to buy a large weekly newspaper with in-depth reports.
    Reading longer texts can be a pain in front of the computer and I prefer in those cases the dead-tree edition.

    1. Re:dead trees by Almond+Paste · · Score: 0

      As opposed to the enslaved-Asian edition?

  24. Not so happy here... by Alwin+Henseler · · Score: 1
    with all these papers going electronic. I mean, it's always worked for me to wipe my ass with. Now I'd have to go out and buy toiletpaper. Have you seen them prices on that 3-layer tissue stuff lately?

    Give a man a fish... and he'll use an old newspaper to wrap it in.
    Teach a man how to fish... and he'll use old newspapers from this day forth.

  25. Re:Please help me with windows! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My friend told me to do this and I tried it already, but Aldi wouldn't accept the return. The Aldi lady said something about the tv part and cpu part were too old and they couldn't take it back.

  26. maybe it was the opinions? by BTWR · · Score: 4, Insightful
    First off (and I'll say it again...) - this is NOT a political flamewar/troll post...

    But did it seem to anyone else that the L.A. Times in the past year or two had gotten WAY too opinionated in their HARD NEWS stories? I mean, I read the LA times occationally, but it seemed somewhere around a year after 9/11 it became VIOLENTLY anti-Bush/anti-republican. I mean, ALL media sources have bias. Here in NY, we have the amazing NY Times. And yes, it has an "opinion" on world politics. Despite what conservative radio says though, I felt that the NY Times still kept it's job of presenting the news in a fair way. The opinion/Op-Ed pages of the NY Times rightfully had opinions (and twice a week has "conservative" writers), so I felt there was fairness there.

    But... take a crappy (although sometimes guilty pleasure) newspaper like the NY Post. It's a tabloid newspaper that 4/7 times a week the front page headline will be "OH NO PARIS HILTON (did whatever)" or this week, despite all the news in the world, the #1 story that took the entire front page cover was some guy buying a $10,000 martini (i kid you not). (I always assumed "The Daily Beagle" from Spiderman was based on the Post)

    Again... this is NOT a political flamewar/troll post... and I like listening to talkradio, but if I listen to Air America or Hannity, I know what I'm getting. They'll focus on the topics of "their" side. But... I don't want that when I read hard news. Luckily, the NY Times doesn't do that. A typical page 1 lately has the #1 story of the day, something about Iraq, some economy/employment article, a local (NY) story, and big international news. Perhaps a blurb/picture about a big sports event. While they will often have stories showing porblems in the Iraq war - hey, problems exist. But they also recently had a story of how women are regaining power in Iraq and schools are being rapidly built (sounds fair to me).

    But the LA Times seemed like the NY Post at times. Did anyone else notice during the recall election there was a story about Arnold, and it was negative EVERY DAY? I mean, come on.

    For disclosure, I voted Kerry and I voted Gore in 2000. I watch opinion shows for their opinions. When I read about hard news, I want the news, not spin (with the exception of the Op-Ed page). Perhaps (i'm seriously asking here, not flaming), is this why their publication numbers fell? Comments? Once again, and finally, this is NOT a political flamewar/troll post. Just my opinion.

    1. Re:maybe it was the opinions? by totipotentsoul · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Daily Bugle.

      Intellectual discourse is nice and all, but on slashdot, make sure you keep your comic books straight.

      The hard news is somewhat opinionated in the NYT too though. Liberal sometimes, conservative others (they seemed to have a problem with Clinton, for one. read up on it on Salon if you want.) Better than Fox, but any news source is generally preaching to its own choir.

      --
      The best posts are both flamebait and informative.
    2. Re:maybe it was the opinions? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The LA Times tells it like it is. They don't try to hide the facts like the rest of the media. As for Arnold, he's not doing a great job in California. The Budget is still bad and he's a racist against the Indians.

    3. Re:maybe it was the opinions? by BTWR · · Score: 1

      Ah! I swear that was a typo! Musta been thinking of Snoopy at the time...

    4. Re:maybe it was the opinions? by bitingduck · · Score: 1

      But did it seem to anyone else that the L.A. Times in the past year or two had gotten WAY too opinionated in their HARD NEWS stories?

      Actually, it seemed to me the opposite had happened, and over a longer period of time. I mentioned in another post that I think the NYTimes put too much spin on news sometimes (though I still like to read their op eds, but I know they're opinion pieces). The opinion page in NY seems to me to be more partisan than the one in LA, and I read both almost every day.

      If the LA paper seems to be more anti-bush, maybe it's jsut because they're more willing to print news that makes teh administration look bad. Then again, maybe they're both doing it and the two of us prefer the opinions of one over the other...

    5. Re:maybe it was the opinions? by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      But did it seem to anyone else that the L.A. Times in the past year or two had gotten WAY too opinionated in their HARD NEWS stories? I mean, I read the LA times occationally, but it seemed somewhere around a year after 9/11 it became VIOLENTLY anti-Bush/anti-republican.

      Nah, it's been a liberal democrat rag for decades. My dad complained about it every morning back in the 70's. Its chosen audience is smug urban democrats who like government programs. The righties hate the LA Times because it's too far left. Real Progressives(tm) hate it because it's a cheerleader for the status-quo. The LA Times has tried to be the NY Times for years, but they just can't break out of the shallowness of local culture.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    6. Re:maybe it was the opinions? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would have been a good post if you hadn't interrupted yourself with disclaimers every other sentence.

    7. Re:maybe it was the opinions? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Maybe they became anti-Bush when Bush demontrated to everyone willing to notice how incredibly inept he is? You can't fault someone for doing that, can you? It's called learning from facts. The paper (and most of the world) saw what Bush was doing, and their opinion of him changed. Expecting media to have a consistent view of a person or entity is ridiculous, and would go a long way to explaining the hopeless state of money-driven 'journalism' in the US...

  27. Sloppy Headline by fm6 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    It's not as simple as "the Internet killed the edition." They tried to introduce a new paper to an already-crowded market and failed. Hardly suprising, with or without the Internet. The only role the Internet plays here is to provide a cheap delivery alternative. The existance of that alternative might have played a role in the Times' decision, but certainly not a crucial one.

    Online newspapers are not a big success story. They cost a lot more to run (on a per-reader basis) than print editions, and they don't generate a lot of ad revenue. They're not going to replace print editions any time soon.

  28. Well, let's see. by artifex2004 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How many years ago was USA TODAY started?
    Didn't it begin with the express business model of having personalized regional editions, with most of the stories being sent via satellite?

    The clock's been ticking for a long time. Only the medium has changed.

    1. Re:Well, let's see. by yelvington · · Score: 1

      > How many years ago was USA TODAY started?

      USA Today was founded in 1982 by Al Neuharth, chairman of Gannett, which previously was known as publisher of a vast number of undistinguished small newspapers.

      In the first year or so most of the staff was "on loan" from Gannett papers around the country, and many even lived in a Gannett dormitory in suburban Washington.

      > Didn't it begin with the express business model of having personalized regional editions, with most of the stories being sent via satellite?

      No. It began with identical editions printed throughout the country, with complete pages being transmitted via satellite. The pages were composed in Washington. Transmitting full page images via satellite was very new technology.

      Previously, nationally distributed newspapers (such as the Wall Street Journal, or the NY Times national edition) were composed "locally" at printing plants scattered around the country from text that was transmitted using teletypesetting technology that dates to the 1930s. (Coincidentally, teletypesetting was pioneered by Frank Gannett.)

      There were several things about USA Today that were revolutionary, in addition to the use of satellite full-page transmissions:

      * Specific targeting of time-pressed travelers, with stories edited accordingly (short, to the point).

      * Radically extensive use of color. The design was extremely controversial at the time.

      * A national-identity viewpoint, reflected in detail that carried down to the level of writing style (extensive use of the pronoun "we").

      * Brand management that was more like a conventional consumer product (toothpaste, automobiles) than a newspaper.

  29. Learn to spell, you fucking moron. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a commercial BREAK. Faggot. Die.

  30. Newspapers are not going away. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1
    Is this the way all our newspapers will be going?

    While there are some people who live on the Internet, there are many others who enjoy reading a book or newspaper. Newspapers are not going away.

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
  31. LA Times = liberal newspaper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The LA Times is a liberal newspaper, as are the NY Times and the Washington Post.

    The LA Times wants to compete against the NY Times for the TV networks' attention, and for the legislators' attention in DC.

    Outside of the TV news in NY, and the legislators in DC, both cities have HUGE liberal readers.

  32. Newspaper = clunky by FiReaNGeL · · Score: 1

    RSS feeds served to my inbox, News search engine (like google news), tons of free contents... honestly, I don't see how a 'paper' only can compete on a large scale basis. Sure, for local content its still a perfect solution (especially for small towns, etc). But aside from the ability to be read while in the bus (or in the bathroom I guess), it has no chance vs the Internet.

    Internet killed the newspaper star? Maybe not, but crippled seriously, that's a sure thing.

  33. Penenberg Wrote About This in Wired by waldoj · · Score: 2, Interesting
    A few weeks ago, Adam Penenberg's Media Hack column addressed the matter of Internet-based delivery cutting into the newspaper business (" Newspapers Should Really Worry "). My favorite bit:
    "Imagine what higher-ups at the Post must have thought when focus-group participants declared they wouldn't accept a Washington Post subscription even if it were free. The main reason (and I'm not making this up): They didn't like the idea of old newspapers piling up in their houses."
    Anyhow, it's an interesting read, and not just because I'm quoted in it. ;)

    -Waldo Jaquith
    1. Re:Penenberg Wrote About This in Wired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After I read the Wired article, I clicked on your blog, where I read a bit and then clicked on the August 1999 archive (always curious how blogs start)...

      And the top post is "In Wired Again." A few posts below that is what I presume is your first appearance in Wired, about an eBay DNS problem that you had e-mailed to Wired and Adam Peneberg at Forbes. Now it's almost 2005, you are in Wired again, this time in an article written by Peneberg.

      See print newspapers could never allow me to discover this utterly useless information...chaos theory thrives on the net.

    2. Re:Penenberg Wrote About This in Wired by vonFinkelstien · · Score: 1
      That's why we don't have a subscription to the local paper.

      We have two small children (3.5 and 1.25), so having a bunch of newspapers lying around would just add more clutter and mess (you can imagine how much fun it is to rip apart a newspaper for small children).

  34. Print on demand is the future by Facekhan · · Score: 1

    Web subscriptions or free through advertisements and newstands/vending machine print on demand is the future. This should be adopted by the major papers soon because I would really hate to see them go out of business as a newspaper is still the most reliable major media news by far over television and radio. TV and radio have way too much pressure to constantly have something to say so they make stuff up when it suits them. (remember when they were saying that 25 people died at in the columbine shooting when it was 13) Or that 25,000 people died on 9/11 when it was closer to 3,000.

  35. Remote printing?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remote printing is fine for a short atricle or two, but I'd rather read it on screen, save the article on a drive, export it for eBook readers, etc.. rather than printing it out. Do these people know how expensive those ink cartidges/toners are? Heck, if having a print edition is important, I'd actually subscribe to one rather than pay $30/cartridge, 2 (made up number) cartridges/month. Even buying them on a newsstand for a full retail price everyday is a lot cheaper than them ink cartridges.

  36. "New York Times" admits bias. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The "New York Times" admits to bias, in the editorial by Daniel Okrent (one of the paper's senior editors).

    The parent article plays a typical Chinese game with words.

    1. Re:"New York Times" admits bias. by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 1

      Perhaps so, but they want details of my household income (!) before they'll tell me about it.

      --

      The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
    2. Re:"New York Times" admits bias. by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Ah, but the "Public Editor" is not a "senior editorial" position. It's rather akin to an ombudsman

  37. Old people do GNU/Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many GNU/Linux contributor are retired and on pension or near there pension. Old people tend to use the internet to communicate a lot more then the working force people its not rare that they picked up Gnu/Linux because there whas a free communication tool that whas less hassle then there windows counterpart.

  38. it only works on winduhs by EllynGeek · · Score: 1

    Ya gotta love it. Migrate from universal formats (HTML and paper) to a winduhs-only technology. Print on demand is a great idea, but once again the idiot pinheads prevail on implementation.

    --

    we will end no whine before its time

  39. E-Mail Newspapers by modpoints · · Score: 1

    Is this the way all our newspapers will be going?

    We can only hope.
    Man, let me tell you how frustrating it is to walk out in whatever you woke up in, just trying to get your paper, and have the sprinklers hit you in the face. Maybe I'm just lazy, but online newspapers sounds interesting.


    Oh yeah, and in Korea only old people read newspapers.

    --
    "I've gotta ask you about 'the Penis Mightier'"
    Registered Linux User #398602
  40. online newspapers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    all the ones that insist on registration suck dirt clods, i have enough to remember besides another user name and password...

    they would benefit more by making their on line newspaper more Spartan like http://www.drudgereport.com/ and forget all the fancy graphics and flash animation just keep it simple & light for low bandwith consumption, the more complicated html, javascript, css, and the rest is the more work you will be putting in to keeping your website updated...

  41. Print newspapers are obsolete by tjstork · · Score: 1

    The only reason to read a newspaper is read the columnists and local sports, and those you can get online.

    The actual news is Associated Press anyway (look at the bylines) and so often the same story just gets repeated. Those same feeds are also picked up by the TV syndicates, and they are doing a great job on the web. For real news, Fox, CNN, MSNBC web sites are just killing print. If I want diversity, I can check out the web sites for anything from Al Jazeera to the Wall Street Journal. The automotive section of most newspapers fails compared to dedicated content like C&D, Motortrend, or Autoweek online.

    --
    This is my sig.
  42. insenitive genarlizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Outside of the TV news in NY, and the legislators in DC, both cities have HUGE liberal readers.

    Michael Moore notwithstanding, not all liberals are huge.

  43. No by PFritz21 · · Score: 1

    I hope newspapers don't die out. Doing the crosswords in the paper is a lot more enjoyable than on the internet. And my regional paper prints the comics in color. That's always fun. Don't forget about classified ads. A great way to find a job.

  44. Wait... I'm confused.... does this.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...does this mean that businesses can ADAPT to mitigate the effects the internet has on them?

    Wow, I can't believe it's possible to alter a business model instead of buying laws to outlaw the things that would negatively affect it.

    Quick, someone tell the RIAA and MPAA!

  45. Re:Please help me with windows! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It worked! Thanks man, If you ever want a discount on hosting just say so. I'll give you 3 months free

  46. They have other problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The LA Times is owned by the Chicago Tribune, and there is a story there:

    The Tribune behemoth has been plauged with problems following the falsification of circulation numbers at two of the company's papers. This caused a large drop in circulation in those papers and led to people getting fired. As a public company, the Tribune management is desperately trying to keep its shareholder happy in order to prevent/minimize shareholder lawsuits alleging fraud.

    At the same time, the LA Times has been bleeding money (which might otherwise be allowed on a short term basis). Everything within the Times is under scrutiny. I'm not suprised that things are getting the axe, and I don't expect this to be the last thing to go.

  47. most satisfying telemarketing moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The newspaper people used to call me all the time to try to sell me their product (before the Do Not Call list). I almost enjoyed being called, because after they went over how great the paper supposedly is and asked if I would be interested in subscribing, I'd respond, "I read all my news on the Internet. Print media is dead." They loved hearing that.

  48. it's all just a little bit of history repeating by goon+america · · Score: 2, Interesting

    yadda, yadda, yadda. Video killed the radio star, the internet killed the video star, the sub-etha net will kill the internet star and soon the government brain implants will kill that. Wake me when the paradigm has shifted again.

  49. Re:Please help me with windows! by CPM+User · · Score: 2, Funny

    Before he does anything drastic like returning it, it might just be a simple error like not having enough peanut butter on his CD's.

    Get your windows CD and cover the shiny side ( don't make the mistake of putting the butter on the label side, we'd laugh at you then ) in a nice even layer about 5mm thick and place it in the drive and restart your computer.

    Aftr this simple step, viruses will not bother you again.

  50. strength of newspapers by zmollusc · · Score: 1

    If 'they have the time to make reasoned, thought out comments about what has happened the previous day', then why don't they? Or is it just the UK papers that are written by monkeys?

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
    1. Re:strength of newspapers by EpsCylonB · · Score: 1

      Try reading the Times (London), admitedly we have some crappy newspapers but the english basically invented journalism as we know it and we can still compete with the best in the world.

  51. It's Not Admitting Bias Which is the Problem by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    It's not so much bias, as not admitting you have bias.

    There is a difference between bias in the editorial section and the news section.

    You knew they were gunning for now Gov. Arnold. You knew they were playing up the prison scandal because they wanted to undermine Bush, not because they though pointing at penises were the worst things in the world.

    The Internet now helps us understand what the Mainstream Media (MSM) doesn't report. And that reveal their bias more than anything.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  52. It is called progress. by adolfojp · · Score: 1

    Cars killed horses. Phone killed the telegraph. TV killed the radio star.

    The jobs haven't been lost, they just moved to another market. Should we stop progress just because it creates products that replace others?

    Cheers,
    Adolfo

    1. Re:It is called progress. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The jobs haven't been lost, they just moved to another market.

      Asia.

      ;-)

  53. Re:Oh please by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 1

    To me, the murder of children -- wherever it occurs -- secures a higher priority of national concern than some dog yapping at the feet a naked terrorist.

    I congratulate you on your humanitarianism and your international perspective. Given your concerns I can see why you would be irritated by the undeniable fact that the vast majority of murders of children worldwide are not reported in the US national media. I encourage you to make your interests known and maybe things will change.

    --

    The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
  54. NEWSFLASH! by krbvroc1 · · Score: 1


    Motorized vehicles (horseless carriages) kill the horse and buggy industry! Story continues on page A5.

  55. Re:Oh please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So how many US born, soon to die crack babies have you adopted?

    None I'd bet.

  56. Re:Oh please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ha, don't worry yourself Ralph about my interests being made known -- that's about six weeks passed now. Lately I'd say the it's the dog who's actually doing more about stopping terrorists from murdering children (certainly to the dismay of you and the NY Times).

  57. Folding? by Spudley · · Score: 1

    LA Times announced that it is folding its national edition

    Folding it, eh? I wonder if they'll enter it in the national origami championships?

    --
    (Spudley Strikes Again!)
  58. Add the Washington Post to that list by Our+Man+In+Redmond · · Score: 1

    People look to it for government reporting.

    Honestly I can't think of any other paper you might want to consider as a "national newspaper."

    --
    Someone you trust is one of us.
  59. i hope so... by kaedemichi255 · · Score: 1

    if many of the smaller, regional newspapers "fold" and perhaps turn to online ventures, that surely will save a lot of paper. not to mention, it would perhaps increase the journalistic qualities of many online news sources, due to the sudden inflow of competition.

  60. Twas ever thus by Our+Man+In+Redmond · · Score: 2, Funny

    I can't find it on the web to verify it, but I believe it was newspaper icon H. L. Mencken, some seventy years ago, who said, "I asked the bellhop to bring me a newspaper. The poor fellow must have been deaf, as he brought me a copy of the Los Angeles Times."

    --
    Someone you trust is one of us.
  61. Re:Oh please by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 1

    Ha, don't worry yourself Ralph about my interests being made known -- that's about six weeks passed now. Lately I'd say the it's the dog who's actually doing more about stopping terrorists from murdering children (certainly to the dismay of you and the NY Times).

    No dismay here, merely puzzlement. It sounds as though you're the same person continuing a conversation, but if so then just now you were concerned about the reporting of child murders and now "that's about six weeks passed". What passed, no more child murders going unreported? I think you'll find that most child murders still aren't reported in the US. Not that I'm surprised or inconvenienced by that, just that I thought it was a source of dissatisfaction for you.

    As to the bit about this dog stopping terrorists from murdering children... well done dog! Good thing we can still get the news from Disney.

    --

    The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
  62. Re:Oh please by poofyhairguy82 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    To me, the murder of children -- wherever it occurs -- secures a higher priority of national concern than some dog yapping at the feet a naked terrorist.

    So are you planning your trip to Sudan soon to save all the children there? No? Oh, so you only care to KNOW about children being murdered. Well that doesn't help much, does it? Especially not as much as KNOWING when government officials screw up, because unlike Saddam or the murders in Dafar our government changes its behavior when public ridicule embarrasses it internationally. Oh well, the great part about 2004 is that you can log on to Foxnews.com and find out every bad thing Saddam did wrong, and I can count on liberal national papers to embarrass our leaders (who deserve it by way of their actions) internationally and force them to change their wrong behavior.

  63. Re: Oh please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My interests were made known on election day -- that's about six weeks passed now.

  64. Re:Oh please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sometimes it's hard to tell who is the troll and who is the catch.

  65. Re:Oh please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm more concerned with the removal of murderous leaders than the embarrassment of American ones.

  66. Is immediacy the only determinant of value? by Infonaut · · Score: 2, Interesting
    it just lacks the immediacy of online news sources.

    IMO this is part of the reason so much online news and TV news sucks. There is immediacy, but no depth. News agencies fall over each other to get the scoop on a story, but when I live in California is it *really* worth knowing that scant details about some breaking story from Lithuania at 10:13 am when a much more detailed and informative story will be showing up in the NYT or the Post a few hours later?

    I'd rather absorb news from a source that is checking facts, looking at all of the angles, providing relevant contextual information, and giving me a deeper understanding of the issues involved.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  67. Re: Oh please by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 1

    Ah, I think I understand you now. Your concern isn't with issues of children being killed or of prisoners being mistreated. Your concern is with using those and other issues as part of some team game. The game is over and your team won or lost therefore the children cease to concern you. Have I got it right?

    --

    The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
  68. Future of the Newspaper by stevensweet · · Score: 1

    The newsstand editions are pdf type recreations of the printed product that are sold as an "electronic subscription" so it is counted as paid circulation by the ABC (Audit Bureau of Circulations).

    There is much abuzz in the newspaper land about digital paper, etc attempting to retain the 3-dimensional quality of a newspaper page with all the "electronic" customisation and entertainment value.

    Personally this and the whole newsstand model are nothing more than newspaper death masks.

    The demographic shift towards on-demand personalised news based upon relevancy and context and delivered using the same criteria are forcing the geographically focused media outlets into a scramble for niche products with broad subscriber appeal. You will see smaller one-paper towns focusing on, say, the local wine industry and build a subscriber base around this topic while depending upon banner advertising to support the rest of the news.

    Newspapers with solid national brand awareness are in the same situation but are segmenting into areas of relevance leveraging their existing brand identity as authoritative source of "x" news be it politics, national security, entertainment.

    Deep pocket and forward thinking national newspaper brands are agressively transforming the print brand into a multiple media brand. The NYT is the best example of this execution.

    Wire services, such as AP, fill most newspapers in the US today as most are AP members. AP is a consortium. In the future you will most likely see AP going direct to the consumer and competing with the large multiple media outlets such as Gannett, Knight-Ridder, Tribune and NYT who are currently members.

    1. Re:Future of the Newspaper by yelvington · · Score: 1
      In the future you will most likely see AP going direct to the consumer and competing with the large multiple media outlets such as Gannett, Knight-Ridder, Tribune and NYT who are currently members.


      AP is a member-owned organization, and the membership doesn't want AP doing that. Neither does AP CEO Tom Curley, who specifically said it's a bad idea when speaking last month at the Online News Association conference in Hollywood. (He derided Reuters for going down that road.)

  69. NYTime by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
    You know, its funny, I don't seem to recall the NY Times having this problem. Perhaps this publication simply needs to take another look at the quality of their content?

    --
    Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
  70. The LA "International" Times??? by Jerry · · Score: 1
    The Times spokesperson said the paper's mission has been to reach 'key Washington, D.C., and New York audiences,'


    Sure.

    The LA "International" Times merely wanted to exert "progressive" influence on the United Nations and the US Federal Government. They couldn't tilt the playing field they way they wanted because there were too many others using blogging, forums, and email to present alternate views and news that nullified the LA "International" Times world view.

    --

    Running with Linux for over 20 years!

  71. Re:Oh please by poofyhairguy82 · · Score: 1
    I'm more concerned with the removal of murderous leaders than the embarrassment of American ones.

    The thing is that the news media can:

    -embarrass local and national leader to force them to reform.

    The news media cannot:

    -invade other nations to remove murderous leaders (otherwise most of Africa would have been invaded by now)

    Are you expecting too much out of the news media then? I prefer the news organizations effectively use what influence they have, then try to gain powers they don't.

  72. Re:Oh please by Tonytheloony · · Score: 1

    I'm worried, do you people have anything close to philosophy classes in high school? Or do you go alligator hunting instead? Let me put it in clearer terms: your reasoning is that of an uneducated redneck.

    --
    The quickest way to become an atheist is to study the Bible thoroughly.
  73. Very poor arguement. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To me, the murder of children -- wherever it occurs -- secures a higher priority of national concern than some dog yapping at the feet a naked terrorist.

    So we have not only a straw man going on, but also a falsehood. Saying the murder of children is a higher priority is a distraction. Why bring up that it's not a "high priority" and then proceed to argue about it?

    And how about the fact that these "naked terrorists" are mostly innocent civillians (according to ICRC) ? Would you feel different if it was your son or father this happened to?
    And you are ignoring the fact that a lot worse was done that "dog yapping at the feet". Inmates of Abu Grhaib have been murdered and raped.

  74. Wrong by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1
    This is more "stupid contrarianism" as is often evidenced on /.

    In two decades this entire industry will be gone. Not one paper, the entire industry. And yes, by that time you will be able to view digital content at paper resolutions.

    Why do people love papers so much anyway? Most just get stock AP and Reuters content and repackage it...there is a huge amount if repeated content.

    Mostly they have become transport mechanisms for huge multipage ads.

  75. Electronic buggy whips! by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1
    Your thinking is too myopic, you are simply projecting present industries on to new tech. Its unlikely that anyone will put NYTime editorials above any well-known blogger in the future. No one is going to be held captive by a editorial team that doesn't jive with their worldview. Get ready for ten thousand editorial blogs, more radical than mainstream in content (why moderate your writing when your audience can pick and drop you on a whim?)

    Google News is probably the best vision we have today - dynamic, unbiased, algorithmic. When you can build your own "newspaper", why bother accepting anyone else's format?

  76. Blame the Internet-We're all failures. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Seems to be a rather popular scapegoat for companies with poor ( or outdated ) business models these days."

    Everyone has a poor and outdated busines model. Slashdotters just haven't fingered the particulars yet.

    The Internet will replace the food industry. We all will suck on bits, and bytes.

    The power industry is obsolete. The Internet will power our homes, and businesses.

    The health care and funeral industry is obsolete. The Internet will heal the sick, and raise the dead.

    The space craft industry is obsolete. The Internet will travel to other planets, bringing back strange and wonderous creatures.

    The sex industry is obsolete. You don't really want to know what one can do with a cable modem.

    The communications industry is obsolete. The Internet will use something known as magic to...well work it's magic.

    Note that in all the examples of [Insert obsolete industry here], the outcome is that we will never leave the house. Way to progess humanity forward people. If the Matrix comes for us? It will not have to move the bodies. Just cocoon the couch.

  77. A couple points of reality... by kataflok · · Score: 1

    Firstly: I have a relative who works in I.T. for a major paper. I've been in there many times watching columnists watching TV and writing their stories. The papers are loosing popularity because they are selling old news. Secondly: The papers, unfortunately, are still not dying. Just because few are buying them does not mean they are dying. Papers can not afford to cease publication. They make a huge profit on the advertising in them -- so much so that readers are not really that relevant. What you pay for a paper is so insignificant it does not even cover the cost of actually printing what is in your hands and nearly every paper could afford to continue to publish even if they gave away the papers themselves for free. In other words: Papers are not longer printed for readers. They are printed for advertisers who must be convinced that the paper is a viable means of advertising. When they have done so, they have a successful paper. Thus, this paper died because it couldn't con enough advertisers -- pure and simple. The net really had nothing to do with it.

    --
    Mod me up, mod me down, flame me, praise me -- whatever you do, you help prove I exist...
  78. this is what i think about newspapers... by Fortun+L'Escrot · · Score: 1

    they are dead. we all need to move on. what should replace them are what i call the micropress. note this is just an idea, no cost analysis has gone into this, though i think in conjunction with national/government news releases and national lottery-blah-blahs such a booth could end up costing next to nothing.

    the idea is that newspapers get printed on demand. and the best part is that users of the micropress can print a selection of articles from internet and old-style print papers.

    users would go to their usual corner stores and buy newspaper subscription cards which could either be the size of a credit card or memory sticks (like those used in digital cameras).

    these cards store a users publication preferences as well as some form of digital money. the user slots the card into the micropress and either modifies their preferences and pay though the corner store system or just print out their daily paper.

    to further subsidize the micropress, a google-style aggregator could also provide recommended articles based on a users selection. so even if a user isnt interested in world issues (which is unlikely) those articles can still be recommended because to some degree they can and do affect local issues as well.

    the micropress is really just a glorified web browser that filters out everything else on the internet and only displays news sites and possibly even certain blogs. who determines the news? a consortium made up of both the private and public sector and maybe even sanctioned by the government (hello china).

    what do you all think? how many of you actually go out of your way to read a newspaper? and i am not talking about picking one up that is lying around in a coffee shop.

  79. out of date? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, slashdot is always up to the minute and never repeats the same story ad infinitum.

    Frankly the internet is too limited. Everyone wants to make a point -- quickly! -- so they leave out stories that might be interesting to the slow and thoughtful.

  80. Re:Oh please by j-pimp · · Score: 1

    I prefer the news organizations effectively use what influence they have, then try to gain powers they don't.

    I expect the news to observer and report. Leave it to those that read the papers to do the reforming.

    --
    --- Justin Dearing http://www.justaprogrammer.net/ We're just programmers.
  81. National newspapers are relics anyway.... by gordgekko · · Score: 1
    The entire notion of a "national edition" newspaper is silly one. Even the so-called "newspaper of record" -- the New York Times barely sells outside of New York. People don't want to read newspapers from far-off cities that don't cover events of interest to them.

    Can you give me a good reason why someone in New York or Washington, D.C. would be interested in the Los Angeles Times? And if you can, are there enough people in those two cities who want to read that paper and is the coverage that good they would skip over local newspapers?

    I don't think the interweb had that much to do with this though I'm sure it hastened the process.

    --
    You want to know who isn't running Firefox 2.x? They spell it "definately" and "rediculous".
  82. two viewpoints? In the US? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really?

    Boy,that 0.5% difference in viewpoints really mean a lot to you...

    In democracies, it is getting harder to get viewpoints that are different.
    Convergence being an important force.

    In Canada, the english media is dominated by CanWest Global which owns most anglo papers as well as GLobalTV. It is run like most papers exeptin this case the owners openly tell canadians that they censor the news to their tastes.
    No wasting time pretending that there are actual viewpoints, only what they perceive the truth to be.

    The Ukraine election is the best example of how the news pack mentality works.

    This is the 4th electionfraud/overthrowing in 4 years done the exact same way by the exact same people and where half the population has one viewpoint but as always, we get one side of the story.

    Considering the deep, deep anti-semitism that runs through the 'democratic' side, Im a little surprised that the jewish lobby hasnt jumped on it, then again those parasites dont mind anti-semites
    when it suits them. Kurt Waldheim's known nazi past and Croatian president writes anti-holocaust book (not 6 but 2 millions) yet gets invited to holocaust memorial opening.

    1. Re:two viewpoints? In the US? by kps · · Score: 1
      In Canada, the english media is dominated by CanWest Global which owns most anglo papers as well as GLobalTV.
      No, it isn't. CanWest runs a distant third to the CBC (television and radio; hard left) and (television and print; centre by Canadian standards, i.e. left by American), both of which, unlike CanWest, also have 24-hour news channels. In newspapers, Quebecor and Torstar are major players beyond those mentioned.
      Im a little surprised that the jewish lobby hasnt jumped on it, then again those parasites dont mind anti-semites when it suits them.
      Non-Canadians are probably wondering how AC's post ended up there: it's because his post is the local version of the "Jews control the media" conspiracy theory.
  83. Re:Please help me with windows! by seanvaandering · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ..snipped stupid luser crap out

    Can anyone help me?

    No. Well yes, but no. Where in "Slashdot" does it say "Free technical support"?

  84. Folding?!? by illuin · · Score: 1

    The LA Times announced that it is folding its national edition on 12/31/04.

    Big freaking deal. I folded a newspaper this morning. There's a good chance I'll fold another one tomorrow! Kudos to them for attacking this very tough project on New Year's Eve, but seriously, the LA Times can crease, bend, and crush newsprint to their heart's content and I still won't care. Unless it's really cool origami ;-)

  85. Deeper financial and philosophical issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Times decision runs much deeper. Combine the recent disclosure that the Times (along with the NYTimes, Chicago Trib and a few other publications) has its own Enron disaster brewing. For years, these publications had been cooking the books on paid circulation. These false numbers determine how much the papers could charge for advertising. By fabricating high subscription levels, they were able to capture significant amounts of revenue they were not entitled to. Imagine if your cellular company tacked on 20% more time to every phone call on your bill, and did the same to every customer.

    Now that they've been cornered, the publishers and editors are retaliating against the public for exposing their fraud. (In a sense, since the subscription fraud came from the top, who would they fire?) They blame you Slashdotters and other online fools for their loss in numbers, and if the numbers hadn't gone down, they wouldn't have had to make them up. You and all the stupid freaking bloggers are to blame. So they're taking away the only "legitimate" news and leaving you all to the pajama-wearing losers posting to Slashdot and blogs from their bathroom.

    Think I'm kidding? Talk to your friends who work for a major newspaper (top 50 metros ought to do) and they should be able to confirm it. Newspapers are scared and angry. Losing the election to a monkey after exposing their bias didn't help either, and as many experts have concluded, it was the media that is suffering the consequence of the exposed hand.

    Now, be a good Slashdotter. Put down the PC. Go buy a nice magazine or something...

  86. You're just wrong by commodoresloat · · Score: 1
    The problem with LA Times is not that it's too liberal; it's that it's just not a great paper, and there's no way it could compete with NYT or the Washington Post in New York or Washington. Why would you bother with the LA Times with such better papers available locally? The LA Times consistently hires good writers and is a good place to look for stories about entertainment, food, culture, etc., but news reporting - and especially investigative journalism - is just not its forte, and never has been, not even when it was locally owned. (In fact, the purchase of the paper by the Chicago Tribune's owners actually improved the quality of its reporting. But not by enough to make a difference).

    As others have pointed out, your comments about bias are just stupid, and your link to the Tibet site is nonsensical. The Abu Ghraib story was huge and important news. Stories about Saddam Hussein's torture were perhaps newsworthy when they broke, during the 1980s and early 1990s. And they were covered by all the papers mentioned during that time (including front-page coverage). But obviously stories that involve Americans are considered more newsworthy by American papers.

    1. Re:You're just wrong by jhobbs · · Score: 1
      good place to look for stories about entertainment, food, culture, etc., but news reporting - and especially investigative journalism - is just not its forte

      Sounds like the LA Times provides exactly what its local readership cares about.

      Yeah, yeah. I live in Miami, we won't get into the Hearald.

  87. No. by commodoresloat · · Score: 1
    The LA Times is no more "biased" than any other paper like it (NYT, Chicago Trib, etc.). Its problem is not bias; its problem is that it's just not a very good paper as far as real news is concerned.

    Your examples of bias don't wash. There were negative stories about Arnold during the recall because the story of the democratic process being hijacked by an action movie star who refused to even discuss his political positions publicly was big news! The groping scandal was stupid, but the stories were true and credible, and the LA Times would have been foolish to ignore them. If you want to look at bias during the recall campaign, look at the free ride Arnold got in the electronic media, some of whom even ran the movie "Total Recall" in the leadup to the election.

  88. Animalisim is so funny to watch. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Granted there are negative aspects to Stoicism, but the more I practice, the more I belive it is Man's only salvation.

  89. Some people don't get it, though... by MoggyMania · · Score: 1

    Complete agreement. Oddly, people in some metro areas seem to grasp this concept better than those in other areas. At least, that's my (limited) experience.

    I wouldn't expect anybody outside California to read or even care about the SF Chronicle, however great it is. Yet more than one friend from the DC area has reacted with condescending shock when informed that we don't read the Washington Post. (I've read it; it had the same basic stuff as the Chronicle, just with a DC slant rather than a SF one. It certainly didn't make me feel like I'd ever been deprived of anything by not reading it otherwise.)

    Just my experience, though. I might just know extremely DC-centric people and not enough SF-centric ones or something. :-)

  90. Re:Oh please by poofyhairguy82 · · Score: 1
    I expect the news to observer and report. Leave it to those that read the papers to do the reforming.

    Unfortunately the news media (which is very consolidated) determines what will be reformed when they decided to pick things on which to "observe and report." Even an so called unbiased news outlet theoretically can't chose to report on every single item every person in the audience feels is "newsworthy." Instead, they chose what to report on based upon their limited time, and the attention created by the reporting results often in reform. Until the news reports it nowadays, its hard to get an issue into the public sphere to be reformed. Therefore a paper like the NYTimes's power is what it lets on the front page. As a current-event newspaper, it decided to report on the breaking story at Abu Garib rather than reporting stories about Saddam that haven't been relevant since before we invaded.

    And I'll be the first one to admit that the fact that the NYTimes continues to harp on such story DOES mean that the organization has a huge bias. The powers that be in the paper want to make sure that the scandal stayed on the American tongue by keeping it on their front page. Even though this is not admirable, the fact is that all new organization (by way of decided what to report about in their limited time/space to do so) have bias. In the modern age, though, I think we are lucky that outlets like the NYTimes and Foxnews are very obvious with their bias. That way people don't get tricked into blindly following one source that claims to not have the bias that it must have. They keep up a front for posterity ("fair and balanced") but the truth is that the CBSs, Foxnewses, and the NYTimeses of the world do use a favor by allowing us to correctly assume what they chose to report on. They way you get the bias you want in your news.

  91. GOOD RIDDANCE!!!!!! by terryfunk · · Score: 1

    and with all the speed you can do it.

  92. Re:Please help me with windows! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "while disconnected from the web"?

    What the fuck?

  93. Re:Oh please by BushIsEvil · · Score: 1

    Yes! I love the liberal national papers, they uncover the truth. We all know Bush is a crook! We know George W. Bush has not captured Osama bin Laden so that Ann Coulter, oil companies, Rush Limbaugh, the Christian Coalition, and Republicans could conquer transgendered people.

    --
    George Bush Banned my IP Address!
  94. Re:Oh please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So are you planning your trip to Sudan soon to save all the children there? No? Oh, so you only care to KNOW about children being murdered. Well that doesn't help much, does it? Especially not as much as KNOWING when government officials screw up, because unlike Saddam or the murders in Dafar our government changes its behavior when public ridicule embarrasses it internationally.

    Geez! What a bunch of yellow-bellied girly-men! Whose government is it that gives in to riddicule? When you're right, you're right, world-be-damned. Yes, it's better for the rest of the world to be right, too, but when they're wrong, what kind of sissy gives in just because they get heckled by backwards Euro-foreigners?

    Yeah, if my unit gets ordered to Sudan, I'll be the guy killing the ratfinks you would rather coddle. When we were ordered into Iraq, we killed tons of Saddam's thugs, including his bastard sons, and captured his own weenie butt in a spiderhole.

    I don't know what pansy-colored world you're living in, but in the real world the US cleans up the messes you and your tea-sipping Euro-weaklings get the rest of the world into by bending over for dictators in exchange for Oil-for-Food money. There's a few good words for people who take money to get in bed with others.

    Don't bother thanking me for my service, you ungrateful twit, unless you have enough brains to agree we're doing the right thing. Otherwise, save your pseudo-intellectual BS for those schoolkids you're trying to brainwash because you can't function in the real world and you can't get anyone to agree with you unless they are too immature to know the difference between right and wrong and have the courage to take action.

    Don't worry, I'll still put my butt on the line to secure your freedom to be an dweeb, but because it's the right thing for me to do, not because you deserve it.

  95. sharp lcd? by marafa · · Score: 1

    a sharp lcd on a sony product? interesting tho i wonder why.
    go ahead mod me as a troll

    --
    _ In Egypt Networks: Network Solutions with a Twist
  96. "Solid" vs "Predictably" by jdfox · · Score: 1

    The WSJ has a "solid conservative editorial page", but the NYT has a "predictably liberal editorial page"?

    Since you're a libertarian and not a conservative, then was it accidental that you didn't write that as "predictably conservative" and "solid liberal"? :)

    Well I'm not a liberal either, and both papers are conservative corporate propaganda sheets IMHO.

  97. LA Times finding something else to blame by khallow · · Score: 1

    As mentioned elsewhere, the LA Times doesn't have national appeal and it's in a market with heavy competition. The management is probably transferring blame to the Internet in order to save face, but restricting distribution seems to me to be a prudent move on their part.

  98. Re:Oh please by RWerp · · Score: 1

    The problem is, many people in Abu Ghraib were innocent.

    --
    "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
  99. the "out-of-date" argument doesn't work for me by conJunk · · Score: 1

    I think the biggest paper-killer, though, is that by the time the news is printed and in your hands, it's out of date. For local news where not much happens (or if it does, everyone immediately knows), a paper might still work - but for national/international news, it just lacks the immediacy of online news sources.

    do we really need split-second news reporting 24-7? the tiny tiny tiny % of people who's day-to-day functioning depends on knowing exactly what happened the moment it does don't get their news from either newspapers or the internet.... they've got an AP or reuters wire in the office, or more likely, a branch in the relevant location

    for the rest of us, ya know, news that's a day or so old is really not the end of the world... where i live, the english language newspapers are three days behind, because they are just translations of the local papers, but i don't mind one bit... i get most of my news fresh, from the bbc and salon, and then happily read it again in the paper three days later, mostly because i'm interested in the local editorial slant

    so, wherever the future of news reporting is, i just don't buy the timeliness argument much anyway... people like newspapers

  100. Re:Oh please by dave420 · · Score: 1
    You just don't get it, do you??

    That "terrorist" is innocent until proven guilty. No trial occured - he, and everyone else at abu ghraib, is yet to be tried, and therefor innocent until proven otherwise.

    Seeing as the US invaded Iraq because of Iraq's apparent unwillingness to comply by international rules, US troops violating international law is a big story - it kind of highlights the ridiculous hypocritical attitude of the US. There would be outrage if that was a US soldier being abused by Iraqis, but as it's the other way round, it's trivial to you.

  101. Downward trend by zmower · · Score: 1

    There was a note on the front of the Guardian yesterday about their ciculation. 377K copies a day but 10.5 million unique users of their website.

    There's also a trend that papers over here in the UK are moving from broadsheet to tabloid format to save money.

    Given this and the competition from mobile phones, 24 hour TV news channels and the net, I think daily papers are coming to the end of their useful lives. I still like to sit with a paper at the weekend though.

    --

    Sig pending!
  102. Re:Please help me with windows! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, since someone helped me out before you replied, why don't you just shove a spork up your ass.

  103. Re: Oh please by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    I think the point was that everyone getting killed had new worthy apeal but some of the importances followed an agenda. It isn't that they are non significant now but rather less usefull.

    For me i prefere not to hear about any children being murdered. There is very little i can do about it other then feel bad. Life is too short to have the exagerated attention of some child brought to my attention after it's ability to make an impact on my life has gone with her soul. I don't wan't to hear about any of it untill thier killers are being brought to trial and justice is being served

  104. Re:Oh please by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    There is an old redneck saying that goes somethign like "kill'em all and let god sort it out"

    I other words most americans are likely to overlook some inocent people getting roused around in order to get the ones that needed it. I'm not saying this is what all americans think or that all americans in certain areas think this. I will say it is a growing sediment amoung alot of americans not in the liberal parts of the country. I am having problems counting the times i hear different people at bars say why don't we just nuke the whole area and turn it into a glass parking lot. I guess this would indecate t hey are willing to screw the inocent and good people in our areas of concern.

    The new york times running these stories about prison abuses to people we have alread demonized was almost fuel to elect bush even though the elite liberals won't be able to see how.

  105. Re:Oh please by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    i'm all for the right thing to do.. can i get a amen brother.

  106. Yes, newspapers are dead. by MikeFM · · Score: 1

    I think newspapers and magazines will be largely replaced by the Internet but that books will retain their popularity.

    Newspapers will be replaced because usually articles are short and are more interesting the sooner you read them after the topic events happened.

    Magazines are largely similar - especially technology or current events magazines will be threatened by the Internet.

    Books won't really be at risk though because it's more pleasent to read a paper book than a screen and the contents of books are less time sensitive.

    Magazines that are less time sensitive will also be okay as again they are more pleasent to read than online magazines. Newspapers aren't really pleasent to read.. the format is more annoying to deal with than magazines. I think of all printed media they will suffer the most due to the Internet.

    --
    At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
  107. Can the LA edition be far behind? by Albion · · Score: 1

    The scandal is that some newspapers have been overstating their readership in order to boost drooping ad revenues.

    My astigmatism makes it harder to read computer screens than print on paper, but dead tree media is just yesterday's news. It can't compete. It's dead, but just doesn't know it yet.

  108. Re:Oh please by RWerp · · Score: 1

    There is an old redneck saying that goes somethign like "kill'em all and let god sort it out"

    It's from Medieval times. It was said by Amalric Arnaud, a French bishop while on a crusade against the Albigensis.

    Abu Ghraib is one thing. Another thing is what the USA is planning to do in al Fallujah --- to turn into a ghetto, where people have to wear their addresses on their necks. Creepy analogies follow...

    --
    "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
  109. Re:Please help me with windows! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember, only do this with creamy peanut butter. The crunchy stuff will just unbalance the CD and cause a lot of unecessary noise . . .

  110. Re:Oh please by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    ahh so the french is responcable for it.. well anyways thanks on the lesson about it.

    as for Fallujah, Abu Ghraib, and iraq in general i think a growing nunmber of americans are starting to gain that way of thinking. Not that it is right or wrong but they are starting to lean that way. I think it has to do with all the bad news comming back and the "more liberal" news outlets refusing to let it drop from the publics eye. I seriously doubt it would ever get to the point were we nuke them but "some people" would like to see it happen. i don't think it represent all of america' s thinking either.

  111. Re:Oh please by RWerp · · Score: 1

    It's the responsibility of American government to defina a realistic and civilised policy to be carried out by the US Army in Iraq. They failed it all the way in the past and are failing it now.

    --
    "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
  112. Re:Oh please by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    No they didn't fail it. The problem seems they didn't live up to your standards. Sure there was a couple of incodents that we look down on but that is a reflection of those soldiers and not the government them selves. To my knowledge, the government never made anything that i would consider unacceptable a policy for the troops to follow.

    The military already has policies in place and it would apear that those policies were not followed in some situations. Thats why there are investigations and criminal proceedings going on right now. When a soldier steps out of line, they are going to be dealt with. If that line is too liberal for you then "tuff". It is within national and international laws and follows the geneva convention. Of course there are a growing number of people that would like to see that gone and we get somewhat brutal with them.

  113. Search by waldoj · · Score: 1

    Or, you could have just entered "Wired" in your search terms. :)

    Fact is, I've been included in a bunch of media outlets' coverage for various reasons -- CNN, AP, ABC News, Wall Street Journal, MTV, VH1, New York Times, Boston Globe, and, in fact, Slashdot not the least of 'em (including "ACLU Joins Fray Over Cyber Patrol Censorware" and "Artificial Intelligence At The COPA, COPA Commission").

    I'm a big goober.

    -Waldo Jaquith

  114. Re:Oh please by RWerp · · Score: 1

    It is within national and international laws and follows the geneva convention.

    I'm sorry, but it was the opinion of top Pentagon officials that Geneva convention does not apply to certain people. Another example would be Guantanamo Bay prison, where people are being held without trial for indefinite time --- how does it comply with national and international laws?

    --
    "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
  115. bloodlust by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    A "couple of incidents"? Three years of US Army massacres across Iraq, for no good reason? Abu Ghraib torture is the official policy of the military and their unaccountable "contractors". You are defending torture and murder of people caught in the US agenda for Iraq. Nevermind that the agenda is corporate exploitation of everyone in Iraq, America, and anywhere else available - including you. You even bring up that "quaint" Geneva Convention. Bush's White House lawyer, Gonzales, produced the indefensible policy statement ignoring the Geneva Convention, and has now been promoted to head the Justice Department.

    Look, just admit that you're a bloodthirsty American with no conscience or interest in consequences. Stop pretending that justice or international law even cross your mind, except as a possible side argument you'll have to lie about on Slashdot. You've got your Iraq bloodbath, your people are running the country. Take of the mask of justice, and gloat over the abundance of carnage to feed your bottomless hunger for destruction. sumdumass

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    make install -not war

  116. TrollModding kills arguments. by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    The rightwing mob depends on "silent snipers", like modders who disagree with a post, so mod it down rather than dispute it. They have no argument; there is no argument, they are interested only in "winning", then they're incompetent to use what they've won. This is true from the schoolyard bully to Bush's White House. It's why they like guns: the "great equalizer", perverting the word "equality" to mean a loser can win, when he's selfish, violent and hateful enough. Remember that there are lot more "silent sympathizers" out here, each of us a small part of a front that is organized only by individual conscience. Which is stronger and smarter than the zombie army shambling towards us.

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    make install -not war