http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/10/01/a_free_press_no_more/I hate to break it to the Globe, but I don't see this working beyond being a niche. The truth is people don't pay for content online beyond financial papers and sports; if they do pay for the news, they pay for the experience of that content. Like a really nice iPad subscription. But a website is just not that great an experience.
I actually got a Kindle and now subscribe to the Atlanta Journal Constitution, and enjoy it very much. Not that I don't use ajc.com once in a while, but I like the e-Reader easy on the eyes experience; plus the newspaper has a beginning, middle and end. When you're done, you're done. With a website it is so fluid there is no feeling that you finished reading it for the day.
The AJC does a lot of articles that cater to the Right, but that is not my standard of whether or not I would pay. Instead, I like a paper that gives me a sense of the city where I am living, and does a fair amount of investigative reporting. The AJC does both, so I am sticking with it . . . on the Kindle. But I wouldn't pay for the website.
And I have one last gripe which I hope can be solved in the future: how about a subscription for ALL platforms? Here are the platforms:
1. Paper
2. On line
3. ALL mobile devices, tablets, and eReaders
How wonderful it would be if you had a choice of subscription, where you can pick 1 or all 3. Right now you can't, and that is not really the newspapers' fault. It is Apple, Amazon, etc. In the future that needs to be fixed so we can get multiplatform subscriptions. Again, I just think there is more value in 1 & 3, than in 2.