NiemanJournalismLab reporting:
For years now, the line between the software business and the media
business has been blurring. Software applications used to take the form
of packaged goods, sold through retail outlets at set prices. Today, as a
result of cloud computing and other advances, applications look more
and more like media products. They’re ad-supported, subscribed to,
continually updated, and the content they incorporate is often as
important as the functions they provide. As traditional media companies
have moved to distribute their wares in digital form — as code, in other
words — they’ve come to resemble software companies. They provide not
only original content, but an array of online tools and functions that
allow customers to view, manipulate, and add to the content in myriad
ways.
...Appification promises to be the major force reshaping media in general
and news media in particular during 2012. The influence will be exerted
directly, through a proliferation of specialized media apps, as well as
indirectly, through changes in consumer attitudes, expectations, and
purchasing habits. There are all sorts of implications for newspapers,
but perhaps the most important is that the app explosion makes it much
easier to charge for online news and other content. That’s true not only
when the content is delivered through formal apps but also when it is
delivered through traditional websites, which may themselves come to be
viewed by customers as a form of app. In the old world of the open web,
paying for online content seemed at best weird and at worst repugnant.
In the new world of the app, paying for online content suddenly seems
normal. What’s an app store but a series of paywalls?...
http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/12/nicholas-carr-2012-will-bring-the-appification-of-media/?fromfloater
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