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This potential for interactivity figures heavily into the magazine's plans for the future, and the editors are already working to provide readers with features not available in traditional print publications...
...interactive capabilities afforded by the Web are part of what differentiates 360 from print magazines," writes Isenberg, who is a Crimson editor, in an e-mail message. "Having read a movie review, readers can link to the movie's official home page. 360 also offers a list of sites, updated every other week, that appeal particularly to the 360 audience...
Here's my prediction: no Web publisher will make money this year or even, maybe, the next few. This is an infant medium; it needs time to find its way. A print magazine can take five years and many millions of dollars before turning a profit, and that's in a proven market where people actually pay for content. We need courage if we're going to create something wonderful. The New Yorker nearly died in 1925, the year it was born. Indeed, it did die for one day, before its patron reconsidered. The magazine at the time...
...cats not dissimilar in manner to the depictions of their red-white-and-blue-hatted American counterparts on the congruent poster. Another work in the room focuses on conspiritorial links within the League of Nations between the capitalist nations to destroy the Soviet "threat." Yet a more extreme print reworks a Russian fairy tale about evil people (fat capitalists) attempting to uproot a turnip (a national symbol), whereupon the turnip rises to the occassion and blows the bastards out of the country...
While prices on certain books are indeed high, the mind-set of many students is that the Coop deliberately inflates them to make profits. This is incorrect in two ways. First, we sell all books at list price (see Books In Print, the industry bible, to confirm this...