There's been a ton of (predictable) reaction to Walter Isaacson's cover story this week, in which he argues that micropayments could save the newspaper business.
Bloggers and old media guys alike have derided the idea. People don't want to pay for Web content online, they argue. They don't want to be nickeled and dimed. Even Nick Carr, who gets it mostly right, and understands that the situation is volatile and fluid, either doesn't believe or doesn't see that the salvation for the journalism business won't come from the Web. (Or to phrase it as a positive: Thinks that newspapers and such still have a chance to find real revenue on the Web.)
It's too late to charge for Web content. And by the same token, who would pay for blog content? Blogs are perfectly suited to the “economics” of the Web: They are like LEDS, requiring only the tiniest bit of energy to give off a modest bit of light. But the business model, such as it is, is based on eyeballs, and is showing serious signs of eroding. That's because, let's not mince words here, no one looks at ads on the Web. (I heard a great bit of jargon today that describes that phenomenon: “Banner blindness!”) So if ads won't work for even blogs, how can they work for the more expensive to produce stuff?
But really, who cares? People don't blog for money, they do it because they want to be heard. And, on a grander scale, the whole, old Web itself should be open and free. That's how it was conceived (anyone remember the the early days of the Internet and the AUP?) and that's how it was designed. It's a boon to civilization to have one, big open cauldron of data that endlessly feeds the world.
And that's exactly why there's a big-ass opportunity for old media, which knows how to package and communicate complicated information: Migrate your content to offline digital platforms!
I'm referring to the class of reading devices that are, well, indifferent to the Web. We're going to see many more of these things, which are online, but non-Web. Think of the Kindle, only better. The fact that 500,000 people bought the Amazon reader, mediocre as it is, tells you that there's demand for off-line, digital reading devices. And Kindle 2 leaves a lot to be desired (want color; want bigger screen; and as a publisher, want the ability to make my stuff look the way I want it, not gussied-up ASCII.) But help is on the way. Hundreds of millions of dollars are being invested in new reading displays, from Plastic Logic to MIDs and netbooks.
If you're still not convinced, take this test. Imagine if Apple had designed the Kindle. (As an aid, check out the third version, here.) Would you pay $200 for that device if it were connected to an online bookstore via WhisperNet? Would you pay 75-cents to download the Sunday New York Times (what it costs at the Kindle download store now)? Hell, I'd pay that for just the crossword puzzle. --Josh Quittner







Hello, random blogger person, and thank you for offering hope for old media.
Cliff
Feb. 10, 2009 17:26:pm
at 17:26:pm
indeed who is Josh Quittner?
i'm more than willing to start reading on a digital off line platform, so long as i dont have to pay for the device and i can keep and share coppies of the books and/or articles i buy. The tech is never going to come off if you have to drop $200 just to read the $10-25 books you can't share with anyone else.
Anyway, good work Quittner, whoever you are, beats Selman and the same "funny" he brings to the Simpsons.
Carlos the Dwarf
Feb. 10, 2009 18:01:pm
at 18:01:pm
Oh.. Sorry... Isn't this MediaMoment? Damn, I got off on the wrong blog. Shit. My bad.
Josh Quittner
Feb. 10, 2009 19:16:pm
at 19:16:pm
Yeah, back the f*ck off, Quittner. This is the Nerd's house. Seriously. Don't f*ck with us.
anon76
Feb. 11, 2009 03:11:am
at 03:11:am
I'm confused... was the MediaMoment line a joke? Or is that one of the Time blogs I don't read?
`
As for the subject matter, I've been curious about this stuff too. I love web content, but I think the trick to print media still making money is to put some content only in print. I'm pretty sure SI and Time both do this already. I do enjoy paging through Time at my parents' house, because online, I tend to gravitate to the same places without branching out, but when I page through the print edition, I stop and read things I don't look for. Does that mean I'm going to start subscribing? Probably not. But I think the only way for print media to make money is to put enough material only in print that people will want to pay to get, while still keeping enough web content to appease the online masses.
`
Or, maybe someone just hasn't come up with the perfect way to put ads into web pages that people will actually click.
Dave
Feb. 11, 2009 11:39:am
at 11:39:am
Does Josh Quittner have facial hair? I'm pretty sure that's a rule around here
Rorschach
Feb. 11, 2009 12:14:pm
at 12:14:pm
Hey come on guys, how many other Time journalists cuss in their postings? That alone deserves some respect for Quittner because I'm sure he's getting rained on by his editors and lost his blogging privileges as soon as he got 'em.
yogi
Feb. 11, 2009 15:39:pm
at 15:39:pm
I've read Mr. Josh in Time and, based on his writing, he qualifies as a full-on nerd. Even if he's trying to fit in with the suits by going facial-hair free. Guest blogger!
dennitzio
Feb. 11, 2009 16:01:pm
at 16:01:pm
Thank you. As per Lev's instructions, I am growing one of those Dizzie Gillespie beards--just a frizz of hair under my lower lip. That should solve the FH requirement and gain me additional posting rights.
Josh Quittner
Feb. 11, 2009 17:15:pm
at 17:15:pm
[...] (Link via Josh Quittner.) [...]
Journalista - the news weblog of The Comics Journal » Blog Archive » Feb. 12, 2009: The opposite of a snob
Feb. 12, 2009 05:39:am
at 05:39:am
[...] That’s the title of a recent Time magazine article. [...]
Better Read Than Dead « Dealing with Digital Media
Sep. 29, 2009 19:31:pm
at 19:31:pm