34°F
weather icon Clear

Is the handheld device the future of news?

When we stopped in Baker for lunch I pulled out my BlackBerry and scanned for important messages and the latest news. One message contained a link to a video, which I watched for a couple of seconds before realizing it was one I'd blogged on a couple of weeks earlier.

The question is: Will people suckled on such devices use them for news gathering?

A recent survey by Magid Media Labs suggests they will.

Among the key findings:

— 46 percent of mobile device owners say watching video on it is “appealing.”
— 88 percent express interest in local news and information content.
— 65 percent expressed interest in watching entertainment and 44 percent for sports.
— 31 percent would give a mobile device to children to watch in the car.
— 49 percent said they would watch commercials.
 

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Minneapolis protesters vent their outrage after an ICE officer kills a woman

Minneapolis was on edge Thursday following the fatal shooting of a woman by a federal officer taking part in the Trump administration’s latest immigration crackdown, with protesters venting their outrage, the governor demanding that the state take part in the investigation and schools canceling classes as a precaution.

2 killed in Mormon church parking lot in Utah

A shooting outside a church building in Salt Lake City killed two people and injured six others, police said.

MORE STORIES