by rose-colored-coolaid » Fri Mar 13, 2009 5:02 pm
Pretty much what DJO said. First, you have to separate the two aspects of "newspaper's dying". One part is the elimination of print distribution, and the other is newspapers that stop publishing articles.
If every newspaper in the world immediately eliminated all print distribution, very few people would suffer much from lack of news. Even ignoring online news, cable TV provides 24-7 news, over-the-air TV provides a couple hours of local news a day, many radio stations are essentially 24-7 news and others like NPR produce regular news segments on under-reported topics. And don't forget that people talk to each other. I don't have to read every meaningful story, because people who are more interested in it than I am share it with me.
On the other hand, if all the papers truly shut down, we face a real threat of reduced variety of news. If there were only 3 papers in the country, it's easy to imagine a situation (like on TV) where one is ultra-left, one is ultra-right, and the paper that tries to use journalistic integrity is unable to actually cover everything that needs covering. Investigative report is especially time consuming and often the most important news we have.
Enough about the demise. In the future, most of all your biggest concerns will be eliminated by technology. E-paper, like what the Kindle and Sony Reader use will progress to the point where you can read a years worth of news stories on a single AA battery. Downloads will become seamless enough that even a disabled elderly will be comfortable with pushing the "Update News" button on his 'paper' (given to him by the Seattle Times of course, but with a 75 cents per diem charge) and within second he'll have the entire days news downloaded over the cell lines without even realizing that he knows how to use a computer (albeit a specialized one).
Think it's impossible? The elderly know how to use microwaves, and every microwave in production has little computers inside. What the 65+ crowd doesn't like are WIMPY computers with Windows interfaces that they find non-intuitive. This is obviously a problem that can/will be resolved.