WASHINGTON (By
Frank Ahrens, Washington Post) October 15, 2005 —
Would you be reading
this story if it were displayed on a 2-by-2-inch screen on
your BlackBerry?
How about if it were
electronically printed on a video scroll that spooled a few
inches out of the side of your cell phone? Could you tell
what was in the tiny picture?
Now. Would you read
this story if it were electronically printed on a paper-thin
video screen the size of a tabloid newspaper, or maybe
something bigger, like The Washington Post, and resembling a
vinyl placemat, like the image you see under these words?
What if this new electronic paper could be folded under your
arm like your dad's sports section or rolled up inside your
yoga mat?
As newspapers fight
declining circulation and face rising newsprint costs -- and
their corporate owners demand wider profit margins --
editors, publishers, reporters and technologists have worked
over the past few years to devise new, paperless ways to
deliver the news.
But the change
stretches beyond the physical delivery system. Reread the
preceding paragraph. The tone is formal and authoritative.
It is aloof and addresses no one in particular, as in a
textbook or a lecture. It is newspapery.
The two paragraphs
above it are chatty and inquisitive, provocative rather than
definitive. They call attention to themselves and speak
directly to you. Their tone is usually not considered
appropriate in a newspaper, and certainly not atop a news
story. Their tone is more at home on the Internet, with
blogs and discussion groups and webzines.
Storytelling will
change, as well. Long articles such as this, with complete
sentences and linguistic device, likely will dwindle in
number and be restricted to the remaining newspapers and
e-papers. News on small screens, such as that of your cell
phone, will spit out in headlines and blurbs and sentences
without articles: "Mars rodent attacks NASA probe."
Russell J. Wilcox,
chief executive of E Ink Corp., a spinoff of the Media Lab
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is working on
the technology part: a paperless newspaper delivery system.
His business creates
paper-thin video screens that, in simplest terms, are filled
with tiny black and white chips. When an electrical current
with data is sent through the screen, the chips become
charged and arrange themselves into a pattern of black type
on a white background. When readers want to flip to the next
page, the particles scramble and rearrange.
In a Tuesday
interview and discussion on the future of newspapers on
washingtonpost.com, Wilcox said his company is working on
adding color to the flexible black-and-white screen. Adding
video and sound, he said, is at most 10 years off. Newspaper
companies such as Gannett Co. and Hearst Communications Inc.
believe in the idea enough to be investors.
For years, newspapers
have thought of ways to deliver their news -- and brand --
in as many formats as possible. But they have found, from
reader surveys and intuition, that the centuries-old
newspaper size provides an optimal viewing experience.
"We think the essence
of newspaper is the large size," Wilcox said during the
interview. "[As] a reader you're an eagle flying over the
desert, you're scanning. You see the rabbit and you zoom
down and you grab it," reading a story that grabs your
interest.
Because the Internet
provides an instant two-way exchange that newspapers cannot,
papers are using it to ask readers not only how they want
their paper but what they want in it. Even if papers don't
ask, feedback can be instant, via blogs, e-mails and
discussion groups. And it goes the other way, as well. When
newspaper reporters take to their papers' Web sites for
discussions or other reader exchanges, they tend to adopt
the Web's laid-back patois.
In this way, the Web
may change the tone of newspaper writing, as in this story.
Among mainstream communications outlets, newspaperese is
pretty much the last outpost of such strictly formal use of
English. Think of how your nightly newscast sounds --
anchors speak of "your neighborhood," for instance. Now
think of how many times real people use common newspaper
words such as "slate," as in, "I'm slated to see a 7 p.m.
showing of 'Wallace & Gromit.' "
But not everything on
the Web is chatty.
Tuesday's online
discussion stirred some interest among bloggers, many of
whom see themselves as alternatives -- and, sometimes,
superior -- to traditional news outlets. The "Annotated
Life" blog (which washingtonpost.com linked to) wrote, with
some indignation: "The truth is that media corporations are
not in control of the exploding online population, and it is
frightening to those in ruling circles who have much to hide
from the people at large."
Rather than hide from
the people at large, I (there's something you usually don't
see in newspaper stories) asked readers how they use
newspapers and the Internet during Tuesday's Internet
discussion.
Complaining that her
local paper is late on news that she's already seen on the
Internet, that stories raise more questions than they answer
and the paper as a whole is of little relevance to her,
Linda Loomis of San Antonio e-mailed yesterday to say that
she often ends her days thusly:
"I throw down our
local fiber newspaper in disgust, as I do most days when I'm
reading the San Antonio Express-News, and exclaim to my
husband (the subscriber), as I do most days, 'I'm going
upstairs, online, for the real news.' "
Bill Breen is a
delivery foreman for the New York Times and, at 59, wrote in
an e-mail, "I know what the dinosaurs must have felt like,
when it started to get cold."
A big newspaper such
as the Times or the Wall Street Journal can go through
200,000 tons of newsprint per year. Now that newsprint has
matched its historical high of $625 per metric ton, Breen
understands the savings that would result if Wilcox's
video-screen newspaper catches on.
"Why in their right
minds would the Sulzbergers [the family that controls the
Times], or any owners, pay for huge printing presses, fleets
of trucks (burning a lot of expensive diesel fuel, by
the way), warehouses and union drivers, if the need was not
there?" Breen writes.
But many readers use
both the paper and electronic versions of newspapers, they
write, portending a future of co-existence.
"And the Sunday
paper," writes Takoma Park's Abigail Grotke, "who would want
to read all of that online? Not me. I need it in hand with
the cup of coffee on a relaxing Sunday morning."