Online Journalism News
Print and online hybrid will be the 'future newspaper'
Danish newspaper
The Jutland Post has created a hybrid print and online edition to prepare itself for what it sees as the future of the digital newspaper.
The JP2, which was developed in partnership with Microsoft, is essentially an e-paper with live feeds that regularly and automatically update the content featured on the platform.
The technology is similar to that used by the
New York Times Reader and
The Daily Mail's e-paper, with a feed linking the Post's content management system with the JP2.
"For us it's a major step towards digital publishing. When the digital
paper comes, we will be ready," Jens Nicolaisen, director of electronic
media at the Jutland Post, told Journalism.co.uk.
"It [the feed] connects with the articles automatically, so we can generate the JP2 without any journalists or production staff.
"That means we are able to distribute the whole newspaper or different parts on any given platform in any different way."
The JP2, Nicolaisen added, offers a model for content distribution more tailored to readers' demands by combining elements of print, online and RSS, and allowing readers to read offline or print out a paper
version.
However, it is limited to being currently available only to PC users.
"If you look at the audience as different reader segments, we want to be able to reach as many as possible," he said.
"With
the regular PDF version of the newspaper, people like it, because they can
recognise that this is how it is presented in the paper.
"But the
problem with that e-paper is that it's not using the technical
possibilities that you have in the computer."
Despite
recent decisions by some news sites to end paid-for subscription to
online content, Nicolaisen believes that developments like the JP2
could offer a sustainable subscription model.
"Today we have a
newspaper to which you can say 'I don't want it' and you don't pay
anything, or you can pay for it - we don't have any variety in our
products."
The JP2, he added, could become a more flexible edition of the paper,
which could be varied to offer different packages of content to readers
at different prices.
"In the future we will still have
subscribers but we have to be able to give them diversified products,
so some people only want it for the weekend and other people want it
digital - and we'll find a price in between."
Ten thousand readers are currently testing the project, which at commercial launch later this month will be available on a subscription-only basis.
Tags (click tag to find related articles; click icon for feed):
jutland post
|
jp2
|
microsoft
|
epaper
|
Sign up here for our free, daily email newsletter to get all the latest stories, jobs, tips and more.
Got a story? Email our news team: Laura Oliver; Judith Townend or telephone +44 (0)1273 384290. You can also follow us on Twitter: @journalismnews / @LauraOliver / @JTownend.
Comments
No comments
You must be registered in order to post a comment. Click here to register or login below if you are already registered:
Forgotten your password? Please click here