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Science News Janet Raloff |
Real News: An Endangered Species Many recently jettisoned reporters covered science, medicine, environment, biotechnology, and research-policy issues. |
Reason October 2004 Jesse Walker |
David Simon Says The creator of HBO's The Wire talks about the decline of American journalism, the failure of the drug war, and a new kind of TV. |
InternetNews May 6, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Does Government Belong in the News Industry? With newspapers floundering in the digital age, calls heat up for government to intervene. |
Fast Company November 2009 Dan Macsai |
Three Business Models the $38 Billion Newspaper Industry Could Copy Three ideas the $38 billion newspaper industry could copy to buoy its business. |
Salon.com July 19, 2001 Kevin Berger |
The incredible vanishing book review In the age of market research, newspaper editors have decreed that their readers just don't care about books... |
Salon.com June 29, 2002 Ian Rothkerch |
"What drugs have not destroyed, the war on them has" David Simon, creator of the searing new HBO series "The Wire," on why even the best cop shows are phony and our anti-drug mania amounts to a permanent war against the underclass. |
Fast Company April 1, 2007 Anya Kamenetz |
Public Interest A modest proposal to save the newspaper trade. |
Reason June 2008 Radley Balko |
'30 Years of Failure' A conversation about the war on drugs with Ed Burns, co-creator of The Wire. |
The Motley Fool January 22, 2007 David Lee Smith |
The Times, It Is A-Marketing The New York Times gets the word out to boost sales. But will the new campaign really change the company's fortunes much? Investors, take note. |
Reason February 2009 Radley Balko |
Briefly Noted: Bureaucracies at War David Simon and Ed Burns, co-creators of the celebrated HBO crime drama The Wire, have brought their seven-part miniseries about the first 40 days of the Iraq War to DVD. |
Reason May 2005 Matt Welch |
Free at Last New newspapers are springing up everywhere, despite the U.S. government's help. |
Reason December 2002 Matt Welch |
Woe is Media There have never been better conditions for journalism than in present-day America. Yet there is an influential movement, and an entire publishing mini-genre, dedicated to convincing us that's not so. It's time to save journalism from its saviors. |
Salon.com April 25, 2002 Eric Boehlert |
The New York Sun's not-so-bright debut Its support for Israel is unwavering -- but New York's just-launched paper is a little shakier when it comes to editorial fundamentals... |
Information Today August 20, 2013 Nancy K. Herther |
What's Next for the Bezos-Owned Washington Post The sale of the Post hasn't been the only recent ownership change in the newspaper industry, but the Post is important far beyond the D.C. area with a rich 136-year history. |
Fast Company Alex Halperin |
Data Journalism Won't Save The News Business It seems like every newsroom in the country is taking a swing at data journalism. |
Reason December 2008 Tim Cavanaugh |
Stop the Journalismisms! The media business is chock full of platitudes, most of them wrong. |
InternetNews April 28, 2005 |
McNealy Mulls Taking Sun Private Sun's CEO and co-founder is considering a plan that would take his beloved Sun Microsystems off the market -- at least for a while. |
Reason February 2005 Matt Welch |
That Old, Tired Balancing Act Did the recent U.S. presidential election kill objective campaign journalism? |
Entrepreneur August 2008 Chris Penttila |
Going, Going, Gone? Coverage for your business in the local newspaper might be increasingly hard to come by. |
InternetNews February 25, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
If Paid Web Content Is Dead, Are Newspapers? Some papers look to online content to save the day, but fret that micropayments or a fully ad-supported newsroom won't pay the bills. |
The Motley Fool January 29, 2007 David Lee Smith |
Will All Newspapers Fold? Rich old men vie to buy fading newspapers. Does anyone else care? Given their business prowess, why would the billionaires be interested in owning withering daily newspapers? Investors, take note. |
Unix Insider January 2001 Peter Baer Galvin |
Giving away the secrets We delve into the many online sources of Solaris administration information: those that are helpful, those that are complete, and those that you can't live without... |
InternetNews December 9, 2008 Paul Shread |
Sun's Financial Failings Greatly Exaggerated If you're expecting Sun Microsystems to be rescued by a white knight, you'll be disappointed: The company doesn't need to be saved. |
Salon.com September 20, 2000 Heidi Kriz |
Business reporting is hot! Hot! Hot! A formerly sleepy media backwater comes alive as more journalists' pulses throb in time to stock tickers. What happened? Why did business journalism suddenly become sexy? |
The Motley Fool September 2, 2009 Eric Jhonsa |
Why Oracle's Getting More Than It Bargained For Sun's earnings show just how weak its hardware business is. |
PC Magazine April 19, 2006 John C. Dvorak |
Don't Blame the Web When Newspapers Die It is hard to blame declines in newspapers' readership on the Internet. There are other factors involved that nobody seems willing to discuss. |
Sports Illustrated December 27, 2000 |
The last frame Baltimore's duckpin bowling is headed for the gutter |
The Motley Fool January 22, 2007 David Lee Smith |
Blog Time in Newspaperville The last best hope of the dailies. Newspapers' own blog pages appear to be generating traffic at a rapidly expanding rate. |
Wired July 2003 Gary Rivlin |
McNealy's Last Stand Technical muscle and a history of innovation made Sun a Silicon Valley standard-bearer. It also blinded famously combative Scott McNealy to the coming Linux wars. Now he's fighting to survive. |
Reason June 2009 Tim Cavanaugh |
Hired News Who will do investigative reporting once the daily newspapers go out of business? |