COIN WORLD GOES NON-POSTAL Público Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 5, Number 39, September 29, 2002, Article 3

    COIN WORLD GOES NON-POSTAL

    William T. Gibbs, News Editor of Coin World writes:
    "Regarding the note from Mr. Richard Crosby published
    last week: It is true that Amos Hobby Publishing, publishers
    of "Coin World," "Linn's Stamp News" and other hobby
    publications, lacks the necessary equipment to place their
    publications into a "plain brown wrapper" of the sort used
    by the publishers of the other magazines mentioned.

    Because we lack the necessary equipment, our circulation
    department cannot provide that service to our subscribers.
    Up to now, the best they could do is suggest subscribers
    have their issues sent to a post office box. Placing the
    issues in an unprinted wrap of the kind sold several times a
    year by the advertising department would require additional
    postal and paper costs, which would be passed on to
    advertisers and subscribers. However, an alternative will
    be available soon, when "Coin World" follows in the
    electronic footsteps of "Linn's" and begins offering the
    complete weekly issue in print and online versions (same
    publication, one print and one electronic). Linn's recently
    began offering each complete weekly issue online (all
    contents, editorial and advertising) as a subscription-based
    publication in addition to the standard print edition. We'll
    announce details about the online issue of "Coin World"
    as they become available, both at our main Web site and
    in the print edition of "Coin World."

    The subscribers to this e-mail publication generally love
    traditional literature in all of its printed glory even as they
    embrace the immediacy of "The E-Sylum." My own
    bookshelves at home (not to mention boxes upon boxes)
    are filled with books on many topics. Electronic publishing,
    however, is a wave of the future, and "Coin World" is
    poised to take its next step into that future.

    The online edition will offer several advantages: It will get to
    subscribers' homes faster than the USPS can get the print
    edition to them (moving at the speed of light vs. snail mail).
    Subscribers who chose the online-only option will have no
    worries about security. Most interesting, I think, to the
    subscribers of this journal, we'll gradually build an online,
    searchable archive of every article and every advertisement
    we publish each week."

    [A searchable online archive would be nirvana for researchers.
    Bring it on! -Editor]

URL da fonte Data de publicação
  • 2002-09-29
Volume
  • 5

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