Monday, April 28, 2008

What happens when newspapers die and got to the www?

Almost from the beginning of the www there was talk about a different kind of writing necessary for the internet.
Shorter, more snippety, simpler.
Combined with the need to understand navigation of a site rather than page turning, and the techniques for that.
Links and all.

Is it true that writing for news reporting thereby had to change?
For insightful articles?
For information and white papers?

First, writing has changed over time. Even long before we got the world wide web.
It hasn't necessarily become shorter. Probably longer with techniques that made writing and publishing easier and quicker.

Now. If you look at some online papers and magazines today you find the exact same articles online as in the print version.
Is that because the writers of these publications don't know the rules?
Or is it because they ignore the rules?
Or is it perhaps that the rule book written by the early internet folks simply doesn't apply?

I believe in the latter.

There's always been a place for the short snippets. The outlines.
The sketches.
Alongside the long stories. The deep insights. The fact filled informative journal.
This will remain true whether we continue to read our words on printed paper or on a screen.

Amazon's Kindle, the electronic book, proves that the experience doesn't have to be all that different from printed paper.
With more sophisticated technology, screens less tiring for the eye, better resolution screens, and a better understanding of typography among the designers designing for the screen, the gap is shrinking as far as the reading experience is concerned.

Besides, the argument that people don't have time to read for as long on the screen as they would when reading a book or a newspaper is flawed.
It's got little to do with technology at this stage and more to do with choice.

Modern people in modern societies spend an awful lot of time reading stuff on the screen, working on the screen, and doing just about everything from a screen. Small or big.

Now add reading books and newspapers.

With thanks to John Kuczala and New York Times for the illustration.

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