By Carl Redman
Managing editor
The Advocate, Baton Rouge, La.
People
who worry about the future of news are worrying needlessly. News always
will be. News is what is new and different. News will be there today
and tomorrow. That is the nature of news.
Anyone who's been
around the news business any length of time remembers the angst that
came with the advent of electronic typesetting, the appearance of
computers in the newsroom, digital photography and pagination. The rise
of multimedia giants brought great changes in even the smallest
newsrooms...
Today, many voices are crying for public attention.
News providers are proliferating at a dizzying pace. The challenge for
every news provider -- from the Web site of the most staid newspaper to
the edgiest blogger -- is to be truthful and accurate. The most
credible and complete will survive and prosper.
The difficulty
for smaller organizations with limited resources is to change fast
enough to grab a share of whatever market develops.
No one
really knows what market is going to develop or what it will look like
a decade from now. The news business is largely writing its own future
-- and making it up as things go along.
About all one can do is
make an educated guess at where the flow is going, point his news
organization in that general direction and then get everyone in the
boat to paddle like hell.






















