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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 22 page paper that explores whether or not the Internet has had any impact on the content found in traditional media. The essay begins with an introduction to the Internet in terms of the forecasts made two decades ago. The writer discusses the declining readership of newspapers and if this has anything to do with the Internet and how newspapers have responded. The 'Net news world is discussed next, including research data regarding users. Studies that have examined and compared the content of Online media and traditional versions are reported. Statistical data included. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
22 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGwbtr.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
material or in the same way, that the book of stone, so solid and durable, would give way to the book of paper, which was more solid and durable
still" (Anonymous, n.d.). Media have changed numerous times in modern history. The invention of the printing press began continuous changes in how people access information and entertainment. In the 1920s
and 1930s, print media found a new competitor with the increasing popularity of radio. Then, television came along and by the very early 1950s, radio station owners and print media
companies acknowledged this was a medium that had to be reckoned with as a competitor. The next huge introduction was the computer and the Internet. The World Wide Web
has most definitely changed the means by which people across the world communicate, access and share information, find entertainment and recreation. In 2002, the United Nations reported there are more
than 655 million people connected to the Internet (Nguyen, 2003). By the late 1970s and very early 1980s, we began hearing about the advent of the global village. Technophiles were
saying that in the future there would be no need for libraries, the entire Encyclopedia Britannica would fit on one small floppy disk, there would be no need for print
media, in fact. We could have the types of news stories we were interested in automatically sent to us via this technology. We would live in a paperless world. These
were visionaries speaking and while all their forecasts have not come true, they could be true. Consider: go to elibrary.com and you can identify topics of interest and this service
will e-mail articles on that topic as they are published. As each technology was invented and popularized, it changed how things were done. Television changed many different aspects of
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