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November 2001, Vol. 12, No. 11
Yes, it is a cliché to say that when people come up with new and unusual ideas, they are thinking "outside the box." The use of a cliché doesn't denigrate the quality of the ideas. Looking at problems with unique perspectives is what makes this business so interesting: It’s always fun to watch an editorial person sitting in on an advertising or technology meeting; the way advertising or technology people look at editorial sometimes causes editors to wince. These outside perspectives help us to innovate, creating new and unusual ways to run our businesses. Publishing is a uniquely collaborative process and it takes a variety of talents -- and perspectives -- to make a newspaper or a magazine come out. This month, we look at four innovations that come from both newspapers and suppliers. Witness:
Compounding the problem was the Asian economic slowdown of 1999 and a desire to avoid layoffs. The result is the Virtual Newsroom system, which the company believes will save it more than $500,000 in the first year of implementation alone. Contributor Linda Crider, a 16-year veteran of Ohio’s Dayton Daily News who is working in Asia as vice president of Kohorst Design Works Inc. of Dallas, talks to the principals of Utusan to give us the scoop.
We're always reluctant to write about a single company and when, over the summer, it became clear that both MerlinOne Inc. of Quincy, Mass., and Engage Inc. of Andover, Mass., were going to offer similar products, I dispatched Contributor Rich Pollack to find out how these systems work and how they benefit publishers. Pollack is a veteran of both newspaper newsrooms and newspaper front offices (a large piece of his career was with the South Florida Sun-Sentinel of Fort Lauderdale), and is a correspondent on our sibling newsletter, NewsInc.
Zappe, a systems editor at the Miami Herald, talks not only to Adobe people about the new version, but also with traditional suppliers who have adopted InDesign into their products.
Anyone who has tried to open a page developed on one type of desktop machine on another type of desktop machine knows that there can be font problems. Adobe -- in conjunction with Microsoft Corp. -- acknowledged these problems, and now offers a solution it calls OpenType, a new font format that is truly cross-platform. Contributor Kellie K. Speed talks to newspaper executives and type experts to determine how OpenType works and what it offers. The OpenType kicker: no application supports it -- except InDesign. While the phrase may be a cliché, thinking outside the box is essential to innovation. -- David M. Cole, dmc@colepapers.net From THE COLE PAPERS, November 2001 |
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