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NY Times curbs free Web access, subscriptions rise
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) March 20, 2012


The New York Times said Tuesday it was cutting back on free access to its online content, as it announced gains in paid subscriptions to its news website.

The prominent US daily said it would be moving the "pay gate" at NYTimes.com to 10 free articles a month from 20.

"With this change, The Times's digital subscription plan will continue to allow for access to a generous amount of free content on the website and across multiple digital platforms," the company said.

One year after launching paid digital subscriptions, The Times had approximately 454,000 subscribers to its various digital subscription packages, e-readers and replica editions of The New York Times and the International Herald Tribune.

The news group has three subscription plans ranging from $15 to $35 per month, allowing access on computers, smartphones and tablet devices. It has a current promotion allowing access for 99 cents for the first four weeks.

"Last year was a transformative one for The Times as we began to charge for digital access to our content," said Arthur Sulzberger Jr., chairman and chief executive.

"Today, close to a half million people are now paying for digital content from The Times and the IHT. We knew that readers placed a high value on our journalism, and we anticipated they would respond positively to our digital subscription packages."

The move by the daily last year has been closely watched by other newspapers looking to boost online revenue. Most newspapers are seeing print subscriptions fall sharply, while getting only limited revenue from online sites through advertising and subscriptions.

A study released Monday showed mobile devices and social networks are boosting news consumption but media outlets are lagging behind technology companies in reaping the profits.

The Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism said 27 percent of Americans are now getting news on mobile devices.

With print circulation declining and print advertising revenue shrinking, the report said that as many as 100 US newspapers were expected to erect some kind of metered paywall around their online content in coming months, joining the roughly 150 dailies such as The New York Times that have already done so.

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Consumer watchdog warns iPads hot to handle
San Francisco (AFP) March 20, 2012 - A vaunted consumer watchdog organization on Tuesday warned that Apple's new iPad is a bit hot to handle.

US nonprofit product testing group Consumer Reports reported that the new-generation iPad with its more powerful processor hit temperatures as high as 116 degrees Fahrenheit, particularly when running videogames.

"It does run warmer than its predecessor," Consumer Reports spokesman James McQueen said of the third-generation iPad.

"People need to exercise caution," he continued. "We are not saying it is a dangerous product, but 116 degrees can be a little uncomfortable."

Consumer reports said the new iPad got about 12 degrees warmer than the iPad 2 tablet while performing the same intensive tasks, such as videogames or downloading large files.

One rear corner of the new iPad appeared to be a hot spot.

Apple did not respond to AFP requests for comment, but prior to the release of the Consumer Reports thermal analysis issued a public statement saying that the new iPad operates "well within our thermal specifications."

Operating temperatures of the latest iPads were hot topics among Apple gadget owners at online forums.

"It does get pretty warm," a person using the screen name ShadowJeff wrote in a public chat at website MacRumors.com. "Hope Apple fixes it or something."

California-based Apple announced on Monday that it sold three million of its new iPad tablet computers over the course of its first weekend on the market.

"The new iPad is a blockbuster with three million sold -- the strongest iPad launch yet," said Apple senior vice president of worldwide marketing Philip Schiller.

The new iPad went on sale on Friday with Apple fans lining up from Sydney to San Francisco to snap up the latest model of the hot-selling tablet computer.

The new iPad is available in Australia, the United States, France, Canada, Germany, Japan, Singapore, Switzerland, Britain and Hong Kong. It will go on sale in another two dozen countries on March 23.



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News outlets losing ground to tech rivals: report
Washington (AFP) March 19, 2012
Mobile devices and social networks are boosting news consumption but media outlets are lagging behind technology companies in reaping the profits, according to a report published on Monday. "The news industry is not much closer to a new revenue model than a year earlier and has lost more ground to rivals in the technology industry," the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journal ... read more


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