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NPR, NYTimes and the Future of News

Paper news is heading the way of the cassette tape. It used to be the primary method of distribution, but it has been made obsolete by faster, smaller, more portable forms of news. Waking up and reading the paper will soon be replaced by grabbing your Apple iTablet from your kitchen table, powering it on, taking it to the bathroom, to the living room for a cup of coffee, and then with you as you head out the door to work.

In this, the Dawn of the E-reader, few news agencies are taking action to balance this shift and will be stomped by the upcoming change or at the very least will be painfully out of date. NPR and the New York Times are two “old world” news agencies that are embracing the “new world” distribution method and doing well at it.

The Future of Distribution: NPR

National Public Radio, created in 1970, brings news to the airwaves. Though it may seem futile to look at a radio station as a beacon to guide us into the future, NPR is superseding larger privately funded news organizations in the digital space race. NPR latched on to 2005’s “Year of the Podcast”[1] buzz, and it appears has revolutionized the way they distribute content.

The secret to NPR’s new strategy is tucked into the footer of it’s brand new (and dead sexy) website. Near the bottom, there’s a list of their on demand “broadcasts”:

They have fully understood themselves as a “broadcast” agency. Rather than sticking to their former pre-Internet glory days where they were the “Kings of Talk Radio”, NPR has changed directions. They’ve positioned themselves to say, “We will be in your email, your iPod, your phone, your RSS News Reader, your iGoogle and Blogs, your Facebook applications, and even on your Radio waves.”

They have a distribution model that fits the future. To be on every device that you may possible own. They’re on your iPod, your computer, and in your car. And with strong APIs, they will continue to be on the next big device. You cannot escape them. And they are dependable.

The Future of Distribution: Times Reader from NYTimes

The New York Times has an elegant Adobe Air application available right now for download at http://timesreader.nytimes.com. Once installed, you’re introduced to a drop dead gorgeous facsimile of the NYTimes paper version. The layout is beautiful, resolution-adaptive and interactive.

Times Reader has taken all the new digital inventions of the web and put them in to what will no doubt be the future of newspapers. A Latest News section, brings you breaking up-to-date news. Zoomable photos and micro-galleries can be embedded into every article. A whole section for News in Pictures. News in Video which is a medium impossible for print. As well as access to the previous six editions of the paper, which means no more trips to the garage!

The application is only in its infancy and you may not agree with the Times’ more liberal point of view, but if you are in the web or print design business, this is definitely a Must Download. It’s one of the forerunners that is beginning to bridge (repair?) the gap between web and print.

The Future of Income: Subscriptions

On the Times Reader you can see by the screenshot that some sections are “locked”, as denoted by an icon. You can catch a glimpse the sections, but are unable to click through to read more articles. A subscription of $3.45/week (less than 50¢/day) grants you access. If you were to ask me to spend $179.40/year on a website or newspaper, I would laugh and scoff in your face. Repackage that and turn it into $3.45/week for dependable news that I can read on my iPhone or iTablet (or whatever Apple calls it), then we have a conversational starting point.

This is not a new model of revenue. But it’s a turn from the “Freemium” ad-based business model that has exploded over the web. “Everything is free!” is ultimately a flawed business philosophy. Out of necessity, you either begin to overburden your users with advertising or you charge for things that otherwise used to be free, and that will eventually lose users[2].

These subscription based services for unlocking content (am I talking about XBOX?) will eventually be the norm. And it just might work. Loyalists who want the brand to continue, will support it, because they’ve extended themselves to be on the devices you love, and to do it well. Whether it’s Amazon’s Kindle or the upcoming iTablet, the NYTimes, like NPR, wants to be in your hands and being first to the gate with a method of digital distribution that appears sustainable is a huge gain.

The Future of Income: User-Supported

NPR takes a different approach to subscriptions. As listeners well know, NPR holds pledge drives every few months and strikes fear into its listeners that “Without your support, we can’t operate.” This fear, loyalty, ransom, or whatever you want to call it works. People will pay for what they love.

Though NPR is government funded, that only accounts for about 2% of its budget[3]. NPR is listener supported. It’s actual budget is determined by radio listeners, foundations, and handful corporate sponsors.

What NPR has done by its distribution method is that its now on every device, and you subconsciously need it there. They’ve beat your local TV news station to your phone.

And Finally…

It seems harsh and obvious and I’m repeating myself over and over. But this is happening. The internet has revolutionized the way we do everything and it’s just a adolescent teen. As Gary Vaynerchuck (currently #2 on the New York Times Bestseller list) would say, “The internet as we know it. The one where AOL would mail discs to your house, is only 14 years old.”

Ultimately, some will defend newspapers like they do cassette tapes. They’ll look on them with nostalgia and shout “I love it when they melt in my car!” But news doesn’t enter our houses via the doorstep anymore, it comes through the cable modem.

[1] http://www.slate.com/id/2133626/
[2] http://37signals.com/svn/posts/1964-37signals-in-the-news-discussing-free-vs-pay
[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Public_Radio

October 28th, 2009 | davatron5000 | 1 Comment

What I’d like to see from Lithium #li3

li3This week my framework of choice CakePHP forked. Now there’s CakePHP (the mothership) and Lithium (the project formerly known as Cake3). Let me tell you, oh people of the interwebs, it’s a weird feeling to wake up on a Friday morning to find out the leaders of your “online community” have parted ways and no one is really talking about it. Kind of like in high school when 2 friends break up and you’re not sure who you’re supposed to hang out with. The public breakup actually seemed very mutual and polite and the world appreciates the “less drama” approach. Let’s look at the facts, CakePHP is still the excellent framework that it was on Thursday and development is still going on.

And to keep myself upbeat about the whole situation I like to pretend there was a board room meeting where Larry Masters raised his arms and said “Go forth @gwoo and @nateabele! and continue with us -not as enemies, but as friends- to bring the good news of PHP to the world! We are all lions! There can be many prides!”… and then Mark Story did some kind of run-up-the-wall backflip because he is amazing…

Nate’s Question

Backstory complete, Nate posed the question on Twitter about what people would like to see from Lithium. I knew my answer wouldn’t fit into 140 characters so I thought I’d post it here.

File Uploader Class

My first dream utility would be some kind of built in File Upload mechanism (component, behavior, I don’t really care). I have had a long sordid story with uploading:

  • First it was a custom jobby that got exploited pretty quick.
  • Even when I did patch it, I was always stressed out about it.
  • Then I used one of the upload components from CakeForge.
  • Then about a year ago I switched to MeioUpload which rules, but after a year of use I’m starting to see the imperfections in it.

The general attitude in the CakePHP community seemed to be sort of “we don’t have that” and “figure it out for yourself”. But let’s be honest, we live in the #lazyweb and most real world applications involve some kind of uploading. Usually it’s creating a method for some computer illiterate person to upload a CSV or a PDF. But in the era of audio/video and media rich apps, the need for any framework to possess a standardized uploading class+handler is inherent. A canonized Uploading Class makes perfect sense. I have high hopes for something like this to come to Lithium because it appears that the creator of CakePHP’s Media Plugin, David Persson, has also defected. But so far his Twitter stream has given few clues to anything like this, just cryptic messages about pyramids, sunsets, and bicycles.

Image Editing Class

Another idea would be some kind of Image Manipulation/Editing class. This idea I got from this tweet. Just like uploading the chances that your modern day app is going to run into images and/or image editing is HUGE. I suppose this runs into a “Which javascript framework do we use!?!?” dilemma, but we all know that jQuery is the right answer here.

Other Ideas

Any other ideas would be toward making useful applications, because I’m a more User Experience oriented person. If I were to put myself on an MVC spectrum, I’d be here:

[DATA] Model ------------------------- Controllers ---------|------------- Views [UX]

Just a tip for the Lithium Team, the secret to becoming an awesome framework is to make yourself completely accessible to n00bs. Have little bits that give your framework some “killer feature” eye candy. Extract mundane tasks like comment systems, rating/digg counters, geolocation, event calendars, et cetera into pre-packaged add-ons. I realize the developers of Lithium probably want to keep things lightweight and generic -and they should because it makes the framework more nimble- but some kind of cabinet of “Almost-Core” add-ons would be killer. Sort of like CakeForge Snippets and the Bakery intended to be before they got all super confusing.

Meeting Biggs Darklighter* at Subway

As for my decision whether or not to “Join the Rebellion” who knows. I really like CakePHP and having used it everyday for over the last 3 years I feel like I’m just hitting my stride. I feel like I can do anything with it. And probably more importantly, as long as I have production servers that are PHP4.3.9 (gasp!) and PHP5.2.6 with over 40 live sites I won’t be leaving CakePHP anytime soon.

On the other hand, some of my most memorable help on the IRC has been from Lithium’s Gwoo and Nate (as well as Mark Story who is already an established bad ass). So based on loose *never actually met* e-relationships Lithium seems like a more natural choice.

It will ultimately come down to the new programming cliche “Choose the framework that’s most suitable for the project” (CTFTMSFTP, for short). It’s like Subway**. There’s no rule that you can only order one sandwich for the rest of your life. It’s simple: choose the one you want to devour at the moment, pay the lady, and move on. Sometimes it’s CakePHP, sometimes it’s Lithium, and sometimes (gasp!) it’s Ruby on Rails.

Hopefully that metaphor changed your life like it did mine. Otherwise, I’m excited for Monday when my Ponies Class for Lithium is unveiled to the whole world. And although my hands are tied to lower PHP versions for awhile, I’m excited to see what comes of the whole Lithium project.

* This is a reference to a scene cut from Star Wars IV: A New Hope http://www.starwarsholidayspecial.com/swcs/episode4/Biggs.html

** Full disclosure: I want Subway to sponsor my life. If you can make this happen, email me.

October 24th, 2009 | davatron5000 | 7 Comments

A place for manifestos

I’ve tuned up the ol’ blog theme here and made it something that’s a little more “me” as opposed to being a total rip off. I still kept the navigation element because i like its unobtrusiveness.

I’ve been cooking up some posts whenever I have a down minute at Paravel, but there hasn’t been much as we’ve got a few major projects on the horizon that are going to make your website (and mine) look like dog doo doo.

Like I said, I’ve been cooking up posts and so far its 3 for 3 on manifestos. Which begs the question, how many manifestos is too many? Wrap your mind grapes around that.

October 9th, 2009 | davatron5000 | No Comments

About

Hello, I'm dave rupert

beforeafter

I've done the unthinkable. The unbelievable. I started a blog in the year 2009. I might as well have started a dinosaur. If it's any consolation, I've been making websites since I was 14 (15 years now! wow!) and I had blog at the now defunct wimpkiller.com that I posted on for over 5 years!

I'm 29. I live in Austin, TX with my beautiful and hilarious wife. I have cat that she named "Moogs", he looks like a cow. I'm training him to be a dog. I'm the Lead Web Developer for Paravel, who sole purpose is to make radical waves on the internet.

I play guitar and a wide array of other instruments.  I speak japanese.  I can't run very far.  I contribute to the Earth scorching music blog Austin Town Hall from time to time and I drive a Scion XB - I know it says a lot about me, but I'll bear every criticism because it's a good square car. I spend most of my days on the computer soaking in the beta radiation, and then my evenings on the couch watching Law & Order with my wife on my Roku.

Yup. That about sums me up.

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about this theme

This blog is built on Wordpress and this is a custom theme I wrote to replicate the functionality of the popular desktop Twitter app by AteBits, Tweetie for Mac. The icons are mostly from Glyphish.

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