When was the last time you picked up a newspaper? Or flipped through a phone book? With the emergence of the internet and online content, many people don't bother anymore when everything they want and need is free and only a click away. Clay Shirkey, blogger and author of "Newspapers and Thinking the unthinkable", says the future of newspapers is bleak, because of the advancement of technology.
"The old stuff gets broken faster than the new stuff is put in its place. The importance of any given experiment isn’t apparent at the moment it appears; big changes stall, small changes spread."
The UHN News, a newspaper available to staff and patients at Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto General Hospital, and Toronto Western Hospital, is one news outlet which has seen the diminishment of print. William Pointon, Senior Communications Advisor for the University Health Network, says that although they still print newspapers, their online version has become very popular.
“I’ve seen the print-run of the newsletter drastically reduced due to the success of the online version. This not only helps save money, it also cuts down on the amount of natural resources used to produce the newsletter.”
Saving money is another reason for the demise of the newspaper. In this tumultous economy, printing newspapers has just become too expensive.
“... the most saliant fact is this: Printing presses are terrifically expensive to set up and run,” says Shirkey.
With online content being faster and easier to access, say goodbye to newspapers.