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			 World’s first iPad newspaper to be launched World’s first iPad newspaper to be launched
			
				
					 
 
 Stop the presses completely. The world’s first iPad newspaper, The Daily, is prepping for launch. Journalists have been hired and are in place at multiple U.S. bureaus, including Los Angeles and New York.
 
 The formal announcement of the digital publication owned by News  Corp. will be made at an event at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art  on January 19, according to two people familiar with the matter. The  people said the event will be attended by Steve Jobs, chief executive of  iPad-maker Apple Inc., and Rupert Murdoch, CEO of News Corp.
 The people were not authorized to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
 
 Details are scant, including how much a subscription to the  tablet-only paper will cost, if there is indeed a fee, but the name at  least implies it will come out once a day. It will cover general news,  culture and entertainment and will include video.
 The publication is a bold attempt by Mr. Murdoch to rewrite the  business of journalism, as revenue from print circulation and  advertising has plunged and growing advertising sales on websites have  not made up the difference.
 
 At an investor’s conference last month, News Corp. Chief Operating  Officer Chase Carey called The Daily a “small bet” because costs were  limited mainly to a modest editorial staff. By contrast, printed  newspapers also have such costs as newsprint, ink and delivery.
 
 Mr. Carey touted the benefits of tablet computing technology.
 “We didn’t want it for a PC,” he said. “We think the tablet, you  know, is a unique experience. You can design something that takes  advantage of that experience, takes advantage of the multimedia  capabilities of it, the technological capabilities of it. I think it  could be an interesting product.”
 
 News Corp.’s other digital initiatives are setting the pace in a struggling industry.
 The Wall Street Journal’s website has required a paid subscription  for 14 years and now has nearly 450,000 electronic subscribers,  according to the latest report by the Audit Bureau of Circulations. The  newspaper charges $3.99 per week for an iPad subscription, which  includes access to its website. News Corp. won’t say how many people are  paying, but more than one million have downloaded the app for free (it  contains some preview material, but full access is restricted).
 In Britain, since July, News Corp.’s The Times of London and Sunday  Times require at least a one-pound payment to access content beyond the  front page online. While online visitors have plummeted, Mr. Carey has  been upbeat about the financial prospects of the new model, though he  acknowledged the businesses will take years to build.
 
 The company’s push toward paid content comes as its MySpace  entertainment site, which is free to users, has lost hundreds of  millions of dollars annually and moved this week to slash half of its  staff, or about 500 people.
 
 Newspaper publishers view the iPad and other tablets as a golden  opportunity because they can sell ads and subscriptions at higher prices  than they have been able to get on websites, though those rates are  still lower than for print.
 User behaviour so far has indicated that reading on the iPad is more  of a “lean back” experience akin to perusing a print newspaper.
 
 Apple is the clear leader of the tablet makers, selling an estimated  13 million iPads since its launch in April, but a bevy of electronics  makers including Motorola Mobility Inc., Toshiba Corp. and Dell Inc.  showed off their tablets last week at the International Consumer  Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Technology research firm Gartner Inc.  expects that 55 million tablet computers will be shipped this year.
 
 The New York Times offers a free iPad version of its newspaper.  Installed on about 1.5 million tablets, the app will require a  subscription later this year when the Times also will start charging to  read multiple stories on its website.
 
 USA Today, which boasts the most print subscribers in the U.S., also  is counting on its iPad app to help lift its advertising revenue, which  has been declining for the past four years. The newspaper, owned by  Gannett Co., has no plans to charge users of the iPad app, which has  been installed on about 1.25 million tablets.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Keywords: today news, daily news, kerala news, special news, hot news,current news,World’s first iPad newspaper
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
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