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Newspapers News & Articles
By Marisa Peacock
| Wednesday July 23, 2008
While the death of print news was predicted awhile ago, the reality is that it’s suffering a long, slow, painful and tedious spiral into oblivion. However, within that spiral there is a lot of analysis. And it’s a lot more than just rearranging deck chairs on the Titantic. It’s about insight into the changing face of news in a digital era.
In its State of the News Media 2008: An Annual Report on American Journalism released by the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism, more than 250 newspapers participated in the examination of the changing nature of the resources in American newspaper newsrooms at a critical and pivotal time.
By Marisa Peacock
| Wednesday June 11, 2008
Think about the last time you saw an ad in a newspaper and went online to learn more about it. Come to think of it, think about the last time you read a print newspaper. New research suggests it’s more common than you think. Actually, it’s 50 percent more common.
By Marisa Peacock
| Friday June 6, 2008

At a recent meeting of the World Association of Newspapers, one of the topics of conversation included the results of the second annual World Digital Media Trends report, which revealed that digital platforms of newspapers are growing at a double-digit rate worldwide, as the world increasingly goes on line.
By Marisa Peacock
| Monday May 12, 2008

Matchbin is touted as the world’s first ecommerce platform as a service that specializes in both product and service matching. They’ve created something called the Community Marketplace Multimedia Edition. This technical wonder bundle is a fully fledged social media system, web content management system and ecommerce marketplace rolled-up in one.
By Marisa Peacock
| Friday January 25, 2008
If there is any doubt that users are going online to read their news, there’s finally proof to dissuade you from thinking otherwise.
According to data released in a new report by Nielsen Online for the Newspaper Association of America (NAA), average monthly unique audience figures for newspaper Web sites grew by more than 3.6 million in 2007. This is a record year for the industry and an increase of more than six percent over 2006 numbers.
By Angela Natividad
| Monday November 19, 2007
For “legit” print journalists, the day of reckoning may be approaching more quickly than any of us would like. A survey by web CMS vendor Polopoly reports that, according to European newspaper execs, 40 percent of published content will be user generated.
In the next three years.
Because of this, blogs and other “new media” commodities will become increasingly critical to the news-making populace. And with this trend, personalized online advertising opportunities are also expected to improve.
By John Conroy
| Thursday November 8, 2007

Belgian media group Cornelio announces Polypoly as their long term partner in providing Web CMS functionality for the company’s family of web projects. Polypoly Content Manager will serve as the central platform for the ongoing development of Cornelio’s publications in the digital arena.
By John Conroy
| Wednesday October 17, 2007

Digital Technology International, the multinational developer of publishing software for news media outlets, has released a new CMS designed to simplify multi-channel distribution, processing, publication and management of newsroom content.
MediaPool unifies content in a single database and interface structure, using this platform to publish to online, offline and mobile channels. The unified database reduces duplication and streamlines operations, and enables a child-parent tracking of a story’s history through edits.
By Marisa Peacock
| Wednesday October 10, 2007
Oh good. Newspapers and blogs are finally getting along. Or so says the LA Times.
Sure, newspapers still talk behind blogs’ back, dismissing their whiny opinions and misinformation, but they know that they can drive in the revenue as well as anyone, so they’re willing to post and plug them.
There may be nothing sacred left in the eyes of newspaper purists, but then again, this is online media, and nothing is truly sacred anymore. “Any new information source is a potential competitor to a local newspaper. Smart newspapers are figuring out they don’t have to fight with those competitors — they can make alliances with them,” said Robert Niles, editor of the Online Journalism Review.
By Marisa Peacock
| Friday August 17, 2007
Traffic is high and the living is easy, unless you’re a local online paper.
A report from the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at John F. Kennedy School of Government called “Creative Destruction: An Exploratory Look at News on the Internet” looked at the traffic of 160 news-based websites over a yearlong period.
What they found indicates that “websites of national ‘brand-name’ newspapers are growing,” while those of many local papers are not.