The Washington Post will take a "watch and see" approach rather than rushing into a system to force its Internet readers to pay for content online, the vice chairman of the Washington Post Co., Boisfeuillet Jones, Jr., said over the weekend. Mr. Jones,
WASHINGTON (AP) — The WASHINGTON Post is introducing a larger typeface and more graphics in its bid to make the print edition easier to read and navigate.
The Post took a very big step this week, perhaps a leap. It has posted publicly for all to see its new 5,000-word guidelines for digital publishing - the dos and don'ts for journalists working in this new age of online and social-media publishing.
Wednesday, November 9, Politics & Prose officially launched "Opus," Washington's first print-on-demand Espresso book machine. It's one of only a handful operating in independent bookstores worldwide.
Cohort 7: a new book on Watergate written by a GW professor. "Professor Thomas Mallon's new book on Watergate focuses on seven figures who played a key part in President Nixon's life and downfall."
In this twittering, pod casting, screen-viewing, digital age, the morning after America's historic presidential election found hundreds of people clamoring for something a bit more old-fashioned and tangible: extra copies of the morning paper.