Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Can tablet PCs bring life back into newspaper-style reading?

By | March 10, 2010, 2:24am PST

During a presentation in front of the Federal Trade Commission yesterday, Google’s Chief Economist painted a picture of a newspaper industry whose demise was caused by a number of sources, not just the Internet.

That goes contrary to what newspaper executives have been saying for some time: that the Internet and, in particular, news aggregators like Google have been giving away content that newspapers used to be able to charge for - both in subscriptions and ad revenue. In a blog post, economist Hal Varian explained that his testimony is part of the FTC’s exploration of the future of the news industry.

It’s the same old song-and-dance in that blog post and in Varian’s statements in Washington today:  Newspaper readers gave up dead-tree versions of yesterday’s news and replaced it with a web browser that offered real-time, around-the-clock news with the click of a mouse. Blah blah blah. We’ve heard it all before. But, if you’re truly interested, the blog post offers a lot of statistics on trends in news and advertising.

What caught my eye in Varian’s post was the mention of tablet computers - he specifically named “the Kindle, iPad and Android devices” - as devices that might encourage readers to curl up with the newspaper, er, I mean, tablet device on a comfy chair. You see, newspaper readers used to spend time with the newspaper, about 25 minutes a day. By contrast, the average amount of time spent with online news is about 70 seconds per day. He wrote:

There’s a reason for the relatively short time readers spend on online news: a disproportionate amount of online new reading occurs during working hours. The good news is that newspapers can now reach readers at work, which was difficult prior to the Internet. The bad news is that readers don’t have a lot of time to devote to news when they are supposed to be working. Online news reading is predominately a labor time activity while offline news reading is primarily a leisure time activity. One of the big challenges facing the news industry is increasing involvement with the news during leisure hours, when readers have more time to look at both news content and ads.

When I read that, I immediately pictured my dad back in the day. He would come home from work and, as part of his unwinding, would plop down in his big comfy recliner and open up the newspaper. (We used to get the evening edition of the paper back then so the news itself was still pretty fresh.) These days, he’s also reading news online - but rarely is he sitting down on the sofa to open his laptop.

I never could picture a guy like him - or me, for that matter - sitting down to leisurely take in the day’s headlines over the small screen of a mobile phone. But I can imagine him sitting there holding a tablet computer of some sort, touch-screen-scrolling from one site to the next to read stories of interest. Is that enough to save newspapers? Probably not. But it does offer some hope that it can spark more interest in online news reading. From the post:

Online news access on handheld device like cell phones and tablets is likely to be quite different from traditional newspapers reading, with much more multimedia content, interactivity and reader involvement. The transition to a fully online news will be difficult, but there’s a good chance that we will emerge with a significantly more compelling user experience.

Also see: News on mobile phones is growing; Newspapers get second chance

Sergey Brin: Newspapers can still prosper but need time to “figure it out”


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Sam has been a technology and business blogger for more than 18 years.

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Sam Diaz

Sam has been a technology and business blogger, reporter and editor at ZDNet, the Washington Post, San Jose Mercury News and Fresno Bee for more than 18 years. He's a member of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and a graduate of California State University, Fresno.

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RE: Can tablet PCs bring life back into newspaper-style reading?
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You don't know the half of it
nortonmansfield 11th Mar 2010
I unwind with my tablet PC, on the couch, every day after work. It's a true slate from motion computing, it has full computing capability, and I love it, using it as an e-reader, a sketchpad, and a notebook.

And there's something I need to explain about using a stylus versus a keyboard. It's slower, but more leisurely. It's like writing a letter instead of typing, something my brain associates with WORK. I don't want to type when I get home. I want to browse, ponder, think, in a word, relax.
What newspapers still really haven't developed a model for is how to make up the short fall in money they use to make from teh cover price and the shortfall in add revenue that they lose in online adds. The problem really is though that they haven't worked a way to prove to their advertising clients that the premium spot on a web page should cost just as mcuh as it did in a paper newspaper. The difference being that advertisers now know exactly what they are getting in terms of page impressions. I would think though that this is really a factor that newspapers still don't value their online sites - because they haven't realised that they are the real game. I will be one of those guys who plumps on the couch and willread newspapers on a tablet for hours - much longer than I would have ever done with a paper newspaper. Except the time will be spent at more than one site. Really this will become the norm over the next decade and there will be no reason for newspaper revenues to fall. The next generation will be electronic newspapers which actually use the new technologies of wavy paper like electronic surfaces. Then this problem goes away when people can electronically buy an edition of a paper newspaper and read it on one of those new devices. The problem for the newspapers is that they are fundamentally caught between two formats for a decade until the paper versions finally disappear. The trouble is the dinosaurs running these places are still stuck in thinking paper.
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good idea about android
gavin.chan 1st Oct
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good idea about android
gavin.chan 2nd Oct
A good post. Thanks for sharing.Hi, do you own a tablet pc? We supply kinds of tablet computers, including wholesale android tablet and windows 7 tablet pc. Buy a hd android tablet from China at wholesale price.WD21Y
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