New York Times boosting American productivity
Starting on March 28, the New York Times will start demanding between $195 and $455/year from Web readers (more than the Wall Street Journal, but I guess that makes sense since the WSJ serves so many low-income readers). As reading the newspaper is a waste of time for all but a handful of Americans, e.g., Congress, the President, and their respective staffs, I am predicting a large boost in American productivity. A workforce that has up-to-the-minute information about events on the other side of the globe is… a workforce that should probably have spent that time doing work. If you don’t own a fighter jet, what’s the value of learning about proposed no-fly zones in Libya? If you aren’t a member of Congress or one of their fatcat donors who can get a Senator on the phone, what’s the value of learning in real-time about a debate over a new law?
This is not an argument against learning about the world. I don’t think it is a waste of time to read New Yorker magazine, for example, or go to the library and get a book on the Collapse of 2008. But that’s different than breathlessly trying to keep up with the fragments of information as published by a newspaper. In fact, for many stories I prefer to check the Wikipedia page where the relevant facts have been accumulated.
A very productive friend who has written numerous books says “Don’t read the newspaper in the morning; the bits of disconnected information will scatter your brain and you won’t get any work done for the rest of the day.” So the New York Times is doing us all a huge favor by walling off their content. Let’s hope all of the other newspapers follow!
[Amusingly, the Times, which in the past has had difficulty with basic HTML navigation and hyperlinking, says that they are going to use Canadians as unpaid testers for their incompetently written code: “The 20-article limit begins immediately for readers accessing NYTimes.com from Canada, which allows the company time to work out any software issues before the system begins in the United States and the rest of the world.”]
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