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On 12/10/2013 10:26 AM, Eric Chadbourne wrote: > So what do you read? Three main sources. First, I use an obscure twitter app that I like, running on Android, and my follow list is kind of a custom wire service of headlines; frequently I am very aware of the story and the headline update is sufficient in itself, frequently there is a URL to a more complete story I might look at. Unfortunately, it is event driven, and some days I get far too many tweets to read. Plus side, when I am caught up, I am very up-to-date. I also have a couple different news apps on my Android devices that can put up alerts on breaking news (NY Times, Guardian, and "Breaking News"). While writing this I saw who Time named as person of the year. Second, I listen to public radio. This isn't something I read, but I can do it while doing other things. While getting myself up and ready to work and driving there, and again on my way home, I listen to Morning Edition and All Things Considered. I will punch buttons between WGBH and WBUR and internet streams, with a preference for stories from NPR over local preemptions. But then I will occasionally catch up on local stories that WBUR puts up as a podcast, in bulk, with headphones plugged into my Android phone, while doing something else. Third, is something I am guessing you won't like. Once upon a time if newspaper X had a scoop on the front page, you had to spend money on their paper if you wanted to read all about it. Possibly the story took a lot of time and effort to report, but as an exclusive, if could be worth it to newspaper X. A little like selling software: it takes time to produce, but you can to sell the result. But for news, there is a new tragedy of the commons: Newspaper X spends a lot on a story, website Y reads it, rewrites a summary for next to nothing, you can read it immediately for maybe nothing, and X doesn't get much of anything to reward their hard work. (It will be interesting to see how Bezos addresses this with the Washington Post.) So I pay, kind of like contributing to charity, for the good of the world. My wife and I subscribe to the New York Times for weekday paper delivery. She reads the physical copy on the bus to work (some days, but not always), and I read the electronic version. Recently they did what looks like an HTML 5 app that finally lets me survey the entire day's paper without seeing repeated stories from previous days, the coming Sunday magazine, etc. We also have an electronic-only subscription to the Boston Globe. I read it in their facsimile edition on my Nexus 7 (2013) and really like it--but I have good near-vision. The biggest problem with this is I don't have the time to read it all. -kb
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