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ToonsWare
Sep 15
The American Press Institute asked 2,400 newspaper executives if their papers "provide access to stories or information such as sports scores, headlines, stock quotes, etc.," via Twitter, Facebook, Email alerts, Mobile/PDA, YouTube, Kindle, Flickr, e-readers, etc., and told them to "check all that apply."  As the chart above shows, a whopping 24% of all respondents answered "None at this time." Bizarre.

The American Press Institute asked 2,400 newspaper executives if their papers "provide access to stories or information such as sports scores, headlines, stock quotes, etc.," via Twitter, Facebook, Email alerts, Mobile/PDA, YouTube, Kindle, Flickr, e-readers, etc., and told them to "check all that apply." As the chart above shows, a whopping 24% of all respondents answered "None at this time." Bizarre.

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