5 Ways Newspapers Botched the Web
nicholas.m.carlson writes "Remember Knight-Ridder and AT&T's Viewtron from 1983? With a $900 terminal and $12 a month, you could access news from the Miami Herald and the New York Times, online shopping, banking and food delivery, via a 300-baud modem. After sinking $16 million a year into the project, Knight-Ridder shut it down in 1986. That's just the earliest of the 5 newspaper failures on the Web that Valleywag details in this post, writing: 'each tale ends the same way: A promising start, shuttered amid fear, uncertainty, and doubt.'"
Your medium is dying!
But I can't line the bird cage with internets. Thank goodness for old media!
Newspapers are still good at local city and neighborhood news and ads for local retailers.
You must be kidding, I read about things via Google news the day before they're printed in the local paper.
I actually had a few of my non-web friends thinking I'm psychic for awhile.
Wanna fight ? Bend over, stick your head up your ass, and fight for air.
You only used "Smart userbase" to suck up to the moderators. Admit it.
$_ = "wftedskaebjgdpjgidbsmnjgcdwatb"; tr/a-z/oh, turtleneck Phrase Jar!/; print
I know I could not light my fire with my laptop.
Apparently you don't have a Sony battery.