Newspaper software: pretty but dumb

by Mathew on February 22, 2007 · Comments

The New York Times Reader, a piece of software you can download to read the NYT on your PC, came out in beta last fall and I immediately downloaded it for a few reasons — including the fact that I am a geek, a newspaper journalist and a big NYT fan. And I have to admit that it was (and is) pretty slick. Thanks to Microsoft’s presentation software, it replicates the look of a newspaper, but updates itself when connected to the Web, etc.

prison.jpgNow the company has announced several similar readers for two British papers, Forbes magazine and a Seattle newspaper (PaidContent has more here). And like several other people, including James Kendrick of JKOntheRun, David Rothman of TeleRead and Bob Russell of MobileRead, I am left scratching my head and wondering what the hell any of these publications are thinking. Why on earth would anyone download multiple pieces of software — all of which are based on the same rendering engine from Microsoft — to read different newspapers? It makes no sense. (John Dowdell says that it might appeal to someone who only wants to read one newspaper, which I will admit is a possibility, but it still seems overly limiting to me).

I think it probably makes sense to the executives at the NYT, who approved the idea, or to similar executives at Forbes and Associated Newspapers — after all, the lure of such an idea is that it has the potential to replicate the same kind of physical control that newspapers enjoy in print, but in digital form. No cutting and pasting, no linking from the outside, no messy webpages or RSS feeds or any of that nonsense. Just a very pretty, very appealing, Microsoft-controlled walled garden.

There’s already magazine-reading software from Zinio.com that does quite a good job of replicating the look of a magazine on a PC, and is quite handy for reading offline on airplanes and so on. But a single piece of software allows you to download dozens of magazines, not just one. Will any of these publications agree to be bundled all together into a single reader application? Unlikely. That would make too much sense for readers.

Further reading:

David Hunter at HunterStrat shares my bemusement at the whole idea of a dedicated app for a single publication, as does my friend Rob, and James Robertson. And Don Dodge disagrees with me and points out that “the business of software is about business, not technology.” I would agree — but the business of software (or the business of business, for that matter) should also be about serving the customer.

Will a dedicated application just to replicate the look of a particular newspaper be enough of a service to make these readers fly? I don’t think so. The newspapers in question might want you to think that they came up with this idea to help you as a reader, but I think the real reason is that they are trying desperately to think of a way to maintain their control. And my experience is that that kind of motivation tends to make for a crappy product.

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  • I did the same as you and tried out the NYT reader soon after it was announced with much fanfare.

    Oddly enough, I found I like my newspaper on paper and my news websites on a web pages.
  • Mathew
    I sort of feel the same way, Dominic. The Microsoft readers just feel like something that's neither fish nor fowl to me.
  • I have found that several companies allow you to read local newspapers from around the world, with what seems to be the same look and feel as the original. www.newspaperdirect.com is one such outfit as well as www.newsstand.com both offer multiple titles including the NYT for a fee that is interesting to the end user. I happen to work in media monitoring, so far from being a plug for these products, we actually use them at work.
  • Mathew
    Thanks for the comment, Eric. Those are both good examples.
  • Mathew, I think we agree more than we disagree. I am sticking with my RSS reader which is actually integrated into the new version of Microsoft Outlook. Most people will stay with their RSS reader of choice.

    It is the newspapers and magazines that want these dedicated readers. They approached Microsoft to build it for them. It makes business sense for the newspapers to do this so they can extend their brand (look and feel) on the web, and advertising probably figures in there too.

    So, Microsoft's customer in this case is the New York Times, Forbes, Seattle P-I, etc. and this is what the customer asked for.
  • Mathew
    Don, I would agree that it makes business sense for Microsoft to do this, because customers asked for it and the software does make the content look quite good.

    I guess I would disagree about whether it makes business sense for the newspapers and magazines involved, however. It might sound like the kind of thing that makes sense, but in the longer term I think it is pretty dumb.

    Why doesn't the New York Times or Associated Newspapers create an open-platform reader that any publication can use to make their content look nice? Sell ads in it and distribute it for free. That at least makes a little sense.

    Trying to close the barn door and then paint a nice picture on it makes no sense to me.
  • JMason
    There are other digital magazine \"readers\" -- I receive multiple industry magazines who use the http://texterity.com system. It\'s browser based and also allows a download that is a single webserver app that runs through whatever browser you want, pretty low key.

    I\'ve also played with the new reader from Adobe available from Adobe Labs at http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/digitaleditions. It appears to be selling ads in preselected boxes (to the point made by Mathew), but this is beta software at best and its unclear how successful it will be... after all there is already an Adobe Reader!
  • Mathew
    Thanks for the comment, JMason. I will definitely take a look at those.
  • Interesting post. (Disclosure re -- possible bias, or vested interests) we have an alternative approach. But the real problem with these issue-based readers is that they do not allow for (1) decent archives (2) multiple subscriptions (point well made by MI) or (3) cite-ation and bookmarking. More on this and links to interesting Greenslade discussion of pdfs here:

    http://exacteditions.blogspot.com/2007/02/micro...
  • Hi Mathew.
    I'm a one-man show in Australia with a community newspaper written by its readers and some software. On a big learning curve now with how to go about getting my stuff out there. I've looked around your site and you seem to have a pretty good handle on things - I'd appreciate any feedback you might have on my site.
    cheers,
    John
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