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Death of the 'Next' Button

After ads, pagination may be the latest casualty in the conflict between readability and profitability.

Christopher Mims 08/03/2010

  • 7 Comments

The makers of Readability, a simple bookmarklet tool that strips Web pages of everything but the content itself announced on Monday that users may soon liberate themselves from one of the web's miniscule tyrannies: The 'next' button that turns readers into pageview multipliers for publishers of online content.

Instapaper, a similar and much-beloved Web/Kindle/iPhone/iPad/Epub app is following suit, says its creator, Marco Armenti.

Both Readability, which was recently incorporated into Apple's Safari web browser, and Instapaper will, in short, turn every article into a sinle-page read whether its publisher wants them to or not.

In many cases, Instapaper already has the problem solved.

"Instapaper already attempts to use the "single-page" or "printer-friendly" version if it can figure out where it is, so it's less of an issue for my customers most of the time," says Armenti via email.

Online publishers have crowed about the death of pageviews for years - here's a recent example related to MSNBC's redesign - but when it comes to demonstrating reach to an advertiser, or just plain figuring out what to charge them, pageviews still rule the roost. When calculating the value of a website, the math is simple: (number of ad positions) x (value of each ad position) x (number of pageviews).

That's why publishers use those little "next" buttons at the bottom of webpages, breaking articles across multiple pages. When used appropriately, they're one way to help recoup the cost of the extra verbiage that appears on subsequent pages, and could even be defended from a design perspective; in a worst case scenario, they're a way to trick readers into reloading a page 67 times in order to view every image in a gallery.

Whatever purpose it might have served, the "next" button may go extinct as Instapaper, Readability and other personalized scrapers give readers - or at least some readers - what they really want: a reading experience that is as unencumbered as what they've come to expect in print.

It can't be a coincidence that this trend arises just as the form factor in which many of us consume web content shifts from the computer to something that resembles books and magazines.

Whether or not it will have any effect on the bottom line of publishers remains to be seen - a similar debate about whether or not to truncate RSS feeds has been rattling around the interwebs for years, and has ultimately led sites like Gawker to limit the functionality of its own feeds in order to push users to the site, where their views can more effectively be monetized. If something similar happens with Readability and Instapaper, it's worth asking whether publishers will begin to attempt to interfere with the functioning of software or browser ad-ons that streamline reading experiences to the (apparent) detriment of their bottom line.

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Marrach

34 Comments

  • 560 Days Ago
  • 08/04/2010

Hmmm. . .So I have to Buy  it first

So I have to first buy a device, then possibly buy extra software, then Buy a Subscription to the content and THEN, THEN, I will be able to read something without those pesky ads, or the page switcheroos that ask if I want to stay for a FULL SCREEN HP Computer promo. . .

. . .Oh wait. I got this capability already!

It's a called a Magazine! And ooh look! I have thing curious thing called a BOOK!

And they don't need to be recharged either!

Sarcasm aside-- I seriously ask what happens when the day comes when Kindle or Nook users have to PAY EXTRA on top of what they ALREADY PAID for their literary content just so they can avoid having to be assaulted by 'Content embedded" Advertising in their downloaded book?

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akwhitacre

7 Comments

  • 560 Days Ago
  • 08/04/2010

Re: Hmmm. . .So I have to Buy  it first

Well, no. The content is free, the bookmarklet is free, while print subscriptions to, say, the New York Times and the Economist together would cost about $600/year, and they have as many or more ads.

Reply

ka5s

60 Comments

  • 560 Days Ago
  • 08/04/2010

ASCII and it shall be granted unto thee

One upon a time I could capture an entire thread on Delphi (now delphiforums) by typing RA FT NS<ENTER> .

Then came the Web, an improvement that has people spending hours online surfing. More like trawling, actually.  

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rsanchez1

213 Comments

  • 560 Days Ago
  • 08/04/2010

Single Page!

This isn't such a big deal when you're using a modern web browser, but if you're using a mobile phone to browse the web, you might want all that content loading at once instead of loading page by page. I know I like it when mobile sites that have pagination give you the option of seeing everything on one page.

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arnetwork

85 Comments

  • 560 Days Ago
  • 08/04/2010

Re: Single Page!

good point

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mattgroom

290 Comments

  • 559 Days Ago
  • 08/05/2010

use /mobile

some sites have a /mobile tag you can put after the website name and it takes you to the pure information for mobiles yet you are not on your mobile.

This isnt real but 3w.?.com/mobile for example. Try some sites maybe youll be lucky and find one.

:)

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pperez333

2 Comments

  • 558 Days Ago
  • 08/06/2010

TR

Have you taken into account that TR uses the "Next button"? Do you think your "boss" is going to shut down that "pagination"? I would be very happy, really.

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Christopher Mims is a journalist who covers technology and science for just about everybody.

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