Newstex Blog

If there was any doubt that the traditional print media industry is in trouble, new statistics from Nielsen paint a very clear picture of that trouble (via BrandWeek)

The annual BlogWorld & New Media Expo will be held at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nevada from October 14-16, 2010.

Do you miss the tap, tap, tapping of an old-fashioned typewriter? Want to turn your iPad into one? Now you can with the USB Typewriter!

In an attempt to integrate CBSNews.com and the CBS News show hosted by Katie Couric, CBSNews.com and its on-air companion have launched a new segment where CBS News is answering viewer questions in a new way (as reported by MediaPost)

This week, Joe Raczynski, an Applications Integrator for Thomson Reuters, Legal wrote a guest blog post on Legal Current, a blog from Thomson Reuters that offers information and commentary on the business and practice of law.

In the June 2010 issue of eContent Magazine, Newstex president Larry Schwartz and a number of content publishing and technology professionals discussed the current state of mobile apps and the future of mobile content for business growth.

Toby Bloomberg, of the Diva Marketing Blog, launched a new free ebook this month called Social Media Marketing GPS.

The big publisher news out this week is about True/Slant, a Newstex publisher, which will be acquired by Forbes.

There is no doubt that the print magazine industry is in big trouble, and this month, Newsweek joined the list of big-name magazines that might not survive in printed form with the announcement that Newsweek is up for sale.

Newstex Authoriative Blogger David Donoghue of the Chicago IP Litigation Blog and partner in Chicago's Holland & Knight law firm won the Kogan Award in the online category from the Chicago Bar Association's (CBA) annual Herman Kogan Media Awards Competition.

It took 74 days for Apple to sell 1 million iPhones in 2007, but that time was shattered by the iPad, when 1 million iPads sold in just 28 days.

A new study from eMarketer predicts that by 2014, 77.8% of the U.S. population will use the Internet at least once per month.





