That’s true…articles from 650 magazines for you to read. But instead of flipping the pages, you will have to click the mouse at Maggwire.
Who reads magazines these days? Plenty of people, I would say. My mother is one of them because the digital world is still like a mystic’s ball to her. Me? For me the differentiation doesn’t really exist because what I read is mostly spewed out by the search engines, RSS feeds and bookmarked portals and blogs. Content rules, and the web we all would agree, is full of it.
But I do pick up the occasional magazine at the airport or while on a long drive. Some memories die hard and knowledge picked up from old favorites like Reader’s Digest (upfront) and Cosmopolitan (on the sly) still holds good.
Magazine articles are written by top-notchers, usually with weeks of research and editorial pen drills. Rich in content and relevancy, there’s a lot that goes into making those articles grab our eyeballs. It is only the cost factor and decreasing advertising revenues that’s pushing magazine publishing off the racks. But the digital jugge