Apple CEO Steve Jobs and News Corp magnate Rupert Murdoch are planning on launching a tablet-only newspaper, according to online reports. Should such a development prove true, it could further alter the dynamics of a publishing world already in flux thanks to e-readers and other electronic media.
Murdoch seemed to confirm many of the e-newspaper’s details in an interview with The Australian Financial Review. “I’m starting a paper in six weeks,” Murdoch reportedly said. “It will only be seen on tablets. It will only employ journalists – and maybe eight to 10 technicians.”
He plans on calling this new publication The Daily: “We wanted to call it the Daily Planet but DC comics [owners of the Superman copyright) were not amused.”
David Carr at The New York Times suggests News Corp has invested some $30 million in the venture. However, he also says the final product will differ from current online news content: “At a time when the ecosystem of news is driven by links, The Daily will have no inbound links from other sites and nothing outbound either.” Updates will apparently be slower than for a traditional news website.
Meanwhile, blogger John Gruber at Daring Fireball seems to think Apple and News Corp will schedule their announcement for early December. “The date I’ve heard is December 9, but that’s a Thursday, which would be somewhat unusual for an Apple press event,” he wrote in a posting. “My guess is that they’re telling people December 9 but it might slip back to Tuesday or Wednesday the week after.”
Reports indicate that the Apple-News Corp collaboration has been underway for months and that the resulting product will be tablet-only.
Periodicals such as newspapers and magazines remain a prime focus of e-readers and tablets because they offer a source of prime revenue for both publishing companies and device manufacturers such as Apple and Amazon.com. Barnes & Noble is marketing its new, Android-powered Nook Color as an ideal way for reading image-intensive magazines such as Rolling Stone, while the Kindle’s relationship with newspapers, such as The New York Times, extends back several quarters.
Both Barnes & Noble and Amazon.com offer their e-reader software for a variety of PCs and mobile devices, in a bid to increase the size of their ecosystem. All companies in the e-reader market face tough competition from the iPad, which includes an e-reader application in addition to device-specific content.
Even backed by the iPad and its enormous sales, can The Daily succeed? Murdoch is known for pouring millions into business ventures until they begin to seize respectable market share. Then again, his company also has its share of online disasters: MySpace, which News Corp once purchased for a cool half-billion, recently unveiled a deal to pull Facebook profile content onto the users’ profile pages – the social-networking equivalent of waving surrender’s white flag.
Targetting AWS, Microsoft? British competition regulator soon to announce “behavioural” remedies for cloud sector
Move to Elon Musk rival. Former senior executive at X joins Sam Altman's venture formerly…
Bitcoin price rises towards $100,000, amid investor optimism of friendlier US regulatory landscape under Donald…
Judge Kaplan praises former FTX CTO Gary Wang for his co-operation against Sam Bankman-Fried during…
Explore the future of work with the Silicon In Focus Podcast. Discover how AI is…
Executive hits out at the DoJ's “staggering proposal” to force Google to sell off its…