Is USA Today going all-digital?
The end of @usatoday in print, which certainly sounds plausible, is terrible news, if true. It likely will mean a gutted staff and far less presence and influence. The paper has a ton of very good journalists, and have emphasized national enterprise and investigative work. https://t.co/f8CfQW4d1H
— Margaret Sullivan (@Sulliview) October 16, 2019
This sounds ominous. Note on sourcing – @Sullview is the WaPo’s media critic; and @Poynter is a major journalistic think tank.
So, is @Netflix doing great? Or is the steaming giant in trouble for not meeting goals?
Depends on who you ask:
Netflix Subscribers Fall Slightly Short of Expectations – WSJ https://t.co/ReW62guCd9
— RalphIsNow@rhanson40@threads.net (@ralphehanson) October 17, 2019
vs.
NETFLIX BRUSHES OFF 'STREAMING WARS' BY ADDING 6.8 MILLION SUBSCRIBERS
Streaming giant says it's been preparing for Disney, Apple competition for decadeAd Age has a somewhat different take from the WSJhttps://t.co/tLR5KufGM7
— RalphIsNow@rhanson40@threads.net (@ralphehanson) October 17, 2019
How are kids outsmarting parental ScreenTime controls on their iPhones?
Pretty much the same way they got past the V-Chip 20 years ago. In tech wars between parents and children, children almost always win.
How Apple's Screen Time is outsmarted by kids, frustrating parents – The Washington Post //
Works about as well as the V-Chip did at the turn of the century? Tech solutions to media access always favor the young over parents. https://t.co/gksVvff1EC
— RalphIsNow@rhanson40@threads.net (@ralphehanson) October 16, 2019
Which also brings up another question: Whatever happened to the V-Chip?
Has it saved us from bad language, violence or Janet Jackson’s nipple?
Whatever Happened to the V-Chip? And did anyone ever care? https://t.co/kL5dB1TINP
— RalphIsNow@rhanson40@threads.net (@ralphehanson) October 17, 2019