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Cynthia McCune's Library tagged sfchron   View Popular

27 Apr 09

Slouching Towards Oblivion - Columnist Maureen Dowd - NYTimes.com

I keep thinking of newspapers as Norma Desmond. Papers are still big. It's the screens that got small.

www.nytimes.com/...26dowd.html - Preview

newspapers future of news sfchron nytimes

  • I keep thinking of newspapers as Norma Desmond.

    Papers are still big. It’s the screens that got small.

  • Now that everybody can check their iPhones and laptops for news that personally interests them, now that they can Google, blog and tweet, as well as shop — and stalk — on Craigslist, old-school newspapers seem like aging silent film stars, stricken to find themselves outmoded by technology.
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07 Jan 09

News after Newspapers: Reinvent, for the end is near!

This guy's got a plan...unlike most newspaper publishers these days. Thanks to Steve Outing for tweeting this.

newsafternewspapers.blogspot.com/...reinvent-for-end-is-near.html - Preview

future of news sfchron reinvent

  • Newspapers, especially on Sunday, have always served this "media guide" function, but haven't constructed themselves around it.
  • Differentiate the online site from the weekend print brand; they're two different animals from now on.
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21 Dec 08

Grammy nominations a snooze

  • So-called illegal downloads may no longer be the gravest danger faced by the imperiled recording industry: Just plain bad music may be what ultimately does the business in
  • for this dismal calendar year, critics can't come up with a consensus pick for the best album of what is probably the worst year for pop music in a lifetime.
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24 Oct 08

Greenspan shocked at failure of free markets

Greenspan finally realizes Ayn Rand is not only dead, but that she was a novelist...and stops believing in the fiction of a self-correcting free market.

www.sfgate.com/...article.cgi - Preview

greenspan sfchron economy free market

  • It was a remarkable moment: Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, a lifelong champion of free markets, publicly questioning the philosophy that guided him throughout his years as the world's most powerful economic policymaker.
  • Greenspan said that, in light of a crisis he characterized as "a once-in-a-century financial tsunami," he was wrong to think financial markets could police themselves. He incorrectly had expected the discipline of the market would prevent financial institutions from taking life-threatening risks.
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