Monday, May 4, 2009

15 years late, but OK

Periodical publishers fiddled while their bedrooms burned, but now all of a sudden they see the appeal of digital readers (which they scoffed at previously, but whatever).

Unlike tiny mobile phones and devices like the Kindle that are made to display text from books, these new gadgets, with screens roughly the size of a standard sheet of paper, could present much of the editorial and advertising content of traditional periodicals in generally the same format as they appear in print. And they might be a way to get readers to pay for those periodicals — something they have been reluctant to do on the Web.

Such e-reading devices are due in the next year from a range of companies, including the News Corporation, the magazine publisher Hearst and Plastic Logic, a well-financed start-up company that expects to start making digital newspaper readers by the end of the year at a plant in Dresden, Germany.


Somewhere, millions of lifeforms in the world's forests are breathing a bit easier...

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