If you live in El Paso, after October 5, you will no longer be able to get the dead-tree edition of the Wall Street Journal delivered.
At least, not on the day it was published.
The future is now. Get used to it.
The dog barks, and the caravan moves on.
If you live in El Paso, after October 5, you will no longer be able to get the dead-tree edition of the Wall Street Journal delivered.
At least, not on the day it was published.
The future is now. Get used to it.
I suspect that this is only one of many to follow. Let’s face it. Print media is fast approaching it expiration date.
LOVE this! You got the WSJ print edition? Can I get your back copies from before yesterday? 🙂
What they mean is that they can’t find a paper delivery person for your neighborhood.
Surely your theory that “they can’t find a paper delivery person for your neighborhood” is a very limited economic analysis. Are there a lack of persons looking for work? Are they not paying enough to hire someone because of a tight job market? Or, my bet, the delivery costs of delivering the newspaper to the service area couldn’t justify their current operation.
And the prospects weren’t looking any better.
We don’t save them.