Unsubscribing
Dec. 8th, 2009 04:53 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Does anyone still get The Boston Globe delivered every day?
I'm trying to talk myself into ending my subscription to home delivery of the "dead trees" version of The Boston Globe, or perhaps switching to Sunday only. Switching would save me $35 a month, and stopping would save $49 per month, and I wouldn't be lugging a huge pile of paper (that I haven't read) to the recycling bin every week. I might keep the Sunday paper for the grocery coupons, which would more than offset the cost of the papers. And I can read anything I want online.
But I do want there to be a local liberal newspaper in some form. And I want to see what gets printed about my theater projects about 4 times a year...and I like the idea of knowing what was on "the front page." But I am almost to the point where it is not worth nearly $50 a month for that.
Did you stop long ago? Should I drop it?
I'm trying to talk myself into ending my subscription to home delivery of the "dead trees" version of The Boston Globe, or perhaps switching to Sunday only. Switching would save me $35 a month, and stopping would save $49 per month, and I wouldn't be lugging a huge pile of paper (that I haven't read) to the recycling bin every week. I might keep the Sunday paper for the grocery coupons, which would more than offset the cost of the papers. And I can read anything I want online.
But I do want there to be a local liberal newspaper in some form. And I want to see what gets printed about my theater projects about 4 times a year...and I like the idea of knowing what was on "the front page." But I am almost to the point where it is not worth nearly $50 a month for that.
Did you stop long ago? Should I drop it?
no subject
Date: 2009-12-08 11:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-09 12:00 am (UTC)As for comics options online, looks like the customizable home pages likes Yahoo or iGoogle have a comics component where you can set up your own line-up, or click around on something like http://news.yahoo.com/comics
There is also a new thing called GlobeReader where you download some software and you can view the actual layout of the paper version online, including comics. There's a demo video at http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/reader/ It only costs about 13 cents/day if you get the paper version already, or about $20/month if you don't. I'm not clear on how the info differs from the web version, other than you download it, so you don't have to be online, and it looks like the newspaper for folks who prefer that.
I'll be interested to see which one of us ends of being "the last person!"
no subject
Date: 2009-12-11 05:00 pm (UTC)