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The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal may remove the “pay wall” around their online content. CNN, Google and AOL having already done so. Are we seeing the death of paid content online, and the return of “free” as a business model?
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US advertising revenue at 4 big online media companies–Google, Yahoo, AOL, and MSN — grew by $1.3 billion in Q2, or 42%. US advertising revenue at 15 big television, newspaper, magazine, radio, and outdoor companies shrank by $280 million in Q2, or 3%.
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Jarvis writes that college media is slow in making the digital shift. High schools may be in the same boat. A few high school magazine editors recently told me they could not imagine a world without their printed magazine. “Too much tradition,” they said.
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The Wee Generation green team’s primary goal is to provide parents with easy steps to a healthy home. The team is also developing an environmentally-safe baby bag, and they want your input (Seventh Generation is a GCI client).
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RIM and Major League Baseball created a BlackBerry specific icon/shortcut that provides one-click access to MLB scores, stats, schedules and more.
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J&J is suing the Red Cross. They explain why on their corporate blog and demonstrate the value of having one. Also take note of the comments — looks like they are posting all of them, good, bad and ugly. Bravo J&J.
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David Berlind says Twitter (or microblogging) has the potential to disrupt subscription-based wire services. Microblogging is still very much anchored in the tech early adopter segment. It remains to be seen if it can penetrate the larger market.
17 August 2007
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