Bend Bulletin 2.0, part 1.5
['Didn't really intend for this to be a series, but our first post on the plight of the Bulletin generated so much interest that it seemed worth a quick followup.]
You couldn’t ask for a better example of how the Bulletin’s online subscription model gets in the way of what people would like to do with that content than Nicole Santa Cruz’s article [bendbulletin.com subscription required] yesterday on local Twitter usage. To the frustration of the subjects in the article, there’s no way to share it with their followers:
bendproper: #inbend I’ll bet @bendbulletin could have gained some readership today from local twitter users. Instead it’s a #paywall #fail
thesachambers: Apparently the Bend Bulletin published article about Twitter today… no wonder so many new followers… can’t read it though
juliejulie: @lorsturm Ha! I actually don’t see many new followers after I’m in the Bend Bulletin because there’s no live link to spread around!
In other Bulletin-related news, according to a Source Weekly article that quotes an internal memo, the Bulletin’s revenue is back to 2003-levels, and they’re implementing 10% paycuts. Employees are also required to take an additional 2-days a month off (read “mandatory 5 unpaid weeks of vacation per year”). And then there’s Warren Buffet’s dagger-in-the-heart comments to investors about the newspaper industry in general:
“For most newspapers in the United States, we would not buy them at any price,” Buffett said. “They have the possibility of nearly unending losses. … I do not see anything on the horizon that sees that erosion coming to an end.”
There might be a tiny bright spot on the horizon though: rumors of a large-format Kindle intended for reading magazines and newspapers. It’s being hyped as a device intended for magazine and newspaper content but, personally, I’m taking that with a grain of salt. I suspect that’s just Amazon’s marketing department saying, “We’ve finally realized that having an e-reader like the Kindle 2 that devotes less than 50% of the viewable area to the display was a pretty dumb idea, and if we don’t fix it soon Apple is gonna eat our lunch.”
Or to put that in pictures, here’s the current Kindle 2 .vs. an artist’s concept of what the Apple eBook might look like:


[Update: iTablet concept design (pictured on right) by Gerry Manacsa, who I just discovered has a pretty cool design blog]

http://gigaom.com/2009/05/04/why-the-kindle-hd-cant-save-newspapers/
Warren Buffett today on CNBC:
Not so fast, folks. (at least according to this)
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http://www.suburban-news.org/News/ArticleDetail.aspx?ID=100328
[Edit: Replaced article text with a link to the original article to improve overall readability - Kieffer]
@Matt Abrams
Full video and transcript of Buffet interview available here
@Sean Williams Are you implying that small-town papers aren’t suffering? That certainly seems to be the tone of that SNA article. Unfortunately I can’t get to the WSJ article the SNA references (it’s behind the *cough* WSJ paywall
).
If that’s what you’re saying I have to say that would seem to be a pretty rosy outlook, given the mounting evidence to the contrary.