Home » Uncategorized » Currently Reading:

Is print dead? – Long live Print!

June 19, 2006 Barry Brady Uncategorized No Comments

In an interesting debate on the Fast Company Website, an email debate (not fax debate) took place between Jeff Jarvis (Former print editor, now blogger and consultant at BuzzMachine)  and John Griffin (President of National Geopgraphic Society’s magazine group) Both these men put forward interesting cases for whether print is dying or not. I wont go into the detail here, but take a look at the online debate here!
What do you think? is print here to stay or will it simply morph? What about newspapers in 20 years from now, will they be around? Interesting times and questions….enjoy!

Related posts:

  1. Will Twitter change the way we live? There’s a lot of hype around Twitter. I hear it...
  2. Affirmitive Action is Dead in South Africa – or is it? Sipho Ngcobo wrote an interesting article on Money Web this...
  3. From Hawaii: The Real Learning for Teams Had an insightful conversation today. As with any education programme...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

Comment on this Article:







Subscribe to this blog

Subscribe

Category Drop-Down

Posts about Future Trends

The future of money

March 12, 2010 Dean van Leeuwen

The future of money

For years banks and credit card companies have held a strangle hold over the movement of money and charged exorbitant rates for doing so. Now this is changing and fast.
Michale Ivey the founder of Twitpay has devised a system, using code that PayPal made available to him, that allows people to make payments [...]

Twitter 10 Billion – quality not quantity

March 5, 2010 Barrie Bramley

Twitter 10 Billion – quality not quantity

In the last few hours the 10 billionth tweet was tweeted on Twitter. As one would imagine there was all kinds of hype and excitement, as Tweeps with the necesary skills attempted to predict the time it would happen, and I imagine even be ‘the one’?
My last tweet was 9999989724. Wild. Will be at 10 [...]

When social media grows up… it will change everything

March 4, 2010 Graeme Codrington

When social media grows up…  it will change everything

Download a copy of this article in PDF format – right click here. The contents of this article can be presented as a keynote or a workshop for your team. Contact our UK or South African offices to find out how.
Twitter recently hosted it’s billionth Tweet and Facebook had over 500 million users [...]

Gen Y are not a pushover

March 1, 2010 Graeme Codrington

Gen Y are not a pushover

Miranda Devine is a Sydney Morning Herald columnist, and recently wrote an excellent piece on Australia’s Gen Y (young people now in the teens and early 20s). She had just witnessed a group of 400 of them grilling Kevin Rudd, the Aussie PM – and they had given him a rough time.
It’s well worth [...]

Recent Comments

Archives

Tweet Blender

codrington: Less generalists, more specialists - the #future of work needs people to focus on serial mastery (by Lynda Gratton): http://ow.ly/1l2hK
31 minutes ago
barriebramley: What are Googlers Googling? - http://ow.ly/19rmT
46 minutes ago
codrington: RT @Econsultancy: Food for thought: driving demand and innovation through Twitter http://bit.ly/9PyoQw
48 minutes ago
codrington: RT @barriebramley: Great HBR article on business culture. Featuring Toyota 'as it used to be': - http://bit.ly/dnELy0 (via @clivesimpkins)
51 minutes ago
codrington: RT @barriebramley: 10 Trends for Teens in 2010 - http://tinyurl.com/yc8ekty (via @carol_phillips via @JoshShipp)
1 hour ago
codrington: The #Future of Work Is Shared (fastcompany blog): http://ow.ly/1l0AT // Shared work spaces for virtual staff
1 hour ago
barriebramley: Great HBR article on business culture. Featuring Toyota 'as it used to be': - http://bit.ly/dnELy0 (via @clivesimpkins)
2 hours ago
barriebramley: 10 Trends for Teens in 2010 - http://tinyurl.com/yc8ekty (via @carol_phillips via @JoshShipp)
5 hours ago