lundi 18 juillet 2011

Print media is dead, but lives on in tablets

By Scott Raymond July 13, 2011, 8:58pm PDT
Summary
The proverbial writing is on the wall for print media. There is new life waiting in digital formats–but can the publishers find a way to convince customers to buy them?
Topics
News Corp, Tablets, Notebooks, Hardware, Notebooks & Tablets, Scott Raymond

Blogger Info
Jason Perlow

Jason Perlow, Sr. Technology Editor at ZDNet is a technologist with over two decades of experience with integrating large heterogeneous multi-vendor computing environments in Fortune 500 companies. A long-time computer enthusiast starting the age of 13 with his first Apple ][ personal computer, he began his freelance writing career starting at ZD Sm@rt Reseller in 1996 and has since authored numerous guest columns for ZDNet Enterprise and Ziff-Davis Internet. Jason was previously Senior Technology Editor for Linux Magazine, where he wrote about Open Source issues from 1999 to 2008.
In his spare time, Jason is an avid amateur chef and food writer, where his work reviewing New Jersey restaurants has appeared in The New York Times. He is also the founder of the popular food web site eGullet and blogs about restaurants and cooking at OffTheBroiler.com.
Scott Raymond

Scott Raymond has been a technologist and system administrator for over 25 years. Starting as a hobbyist in his teens, Scott quickly learned that he could translate his passion and knowledge into a full-time career. He currently works as a freelance systems administration consultant. He has written technology articles for various publications in the past and began contributing to ZDnet as a guest blogger on Jason Perlow's Tech Broiler. Scott and Jason met in New York in the 1990s where they co-managed the New York City Palm Pilot Users' Group with Scott's wife Rachel.
In his spare time, Scott is a trained chef and avid bicycling enthusiast, as well as a voracious reader of historical, science and horror fiction. He is a huge fan of pop culture, with a wide range of interest in TV shows, movies and games.
Vendor HotSpot
Here to help you with your Document Management Needs

Read the DocuMentor blog nowLearn More »
Recently my fellow ZDnet columnist James Kendrick wrote about two newspapers from Philadelpha that were introducing a new plan to sell newspaper subscriptions in digital format along with a discounted tablet to read them.
I will forego the inevitable Android versus iPad debate on this topic; both tablets are perfectly suited for reading newspaper and magazine media in a convenient, portable format. For that matter, The RIM Playbook and HP TouchPad are also well-suited for the task. The truth of the matter is that so far, newspaper subscriptions have had a small amount of success on the mobile platform, but not very noteworthy. Digital magazine subscriptions have not been successful due to price, size and poor implementation.
The only problem is that the success of tablets is still tiny compared to overall computer and smartophone ownership. Most people still see the tablet as a novelty. All of my friends and peers in the tech industry have and enjoy using their tablets; but we’re early adopters. Apple has sold millions of iPad devices, but that’s still only scratching the surface of what is possible.
The Philly newspapers may have latched onto a method that might succeed in putting tablets into the minds of consumers where they weren’t before. Until now, e-book readers like the Amazon Kindle and the Barnes & Noble Nook sold newspaper and magazine subscriptions within their online bookstores. But they didn’t really focus on that capability. Magazines that are sold for the tablet market haven’t had much success.
Newspaper publisher News Corp introduced a digital-only newspaper for the iPad called The Daily with much fanfare, to mixed reviews and mediocre success.
Newspapers have had web-based versions of their print mediums available online for over a decade now. News has been available in digital format for handheld devices since they existed, but they’ve always been relegated to a niche market for tech heads. The media is there. The customers simply aren’t. And I suspect that it really boils down to mindset more than anything else.
By selling deeply discounted tablets along with the digital subscriptions, the newspaper publishers tie together the medium with the device in the mind of the customer. I stopped counting how many people telling me that they didn’t have any need or reason to buy a tablet. They claim to be perfectly happy with just their laptop and/or smartphone. But let’s be honest; how enjoyable is it to read an entire book, or even just a newspaper or magazine, on a device with a 4-inch screen? Or trying to hold a laptop like a newspaper?
Admittedly, smartphones have contributed to the decline of print news. But they are not the technological ideal. Tablets are slightly smaller than a standard magazine. They’re the perfect size for that print medium in addition to books. The real difficulty in selling tablets has always been finding that one hook that will bring in the average consumer after the early adopters and tech heads have had their fill.
Older, less tech-savvy generations may very well find tablets like the Apple iPad and the Samsung Galaxy Tab and the HP TouchPad to be extremely useful for their needs. Lots of folks need a simple computing device for browsing and email. All they really need is that mental trigger that shows them how to do what they’ve been doing for years, on a device that’s easier to use, cheaper and more portable than the computers that have frustrated them for decades.
The capabilities that attracted those of us to tablets simply aren’t enough for the people that are not yet interested. Maybe it requires practically giving away the tablets subsidized by another service–like newspapers–to shift their viewpoint of tablets from “meh” to “Where can I get one?”
Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

http://www.zdnet.com/blog/perlow/print-media-is-dead-but-lives-on-in-tablets/17812?tag=nl.e539

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire