Excerpts by: Helge Rønning, Professor, Department of media and communication, University of Oslo.
As of now the most important communication media in Africa are radios and cell phones. Radio usage and radio stations have like mobile telephony witnessed a remarkable growth in the last decade. Radios are becoming common in poor rural areas and new radio stations in the form of private commercial broadcasters and local community radios are spreading fast and provide alternative voices and perspectives to, in many cases, staid and authoritarian state broadcasters. Both radios and mobile phones are communication media that are cheap and flexible. They do not need permanent electricity supply, and the still substantial illiterate sections of the population can use them. As regards media use in general Africa is still a communication poor continent. This is the case for print media. Newspapers are an elite and urban phenomenon. Book reading is not widespread outside educational contexts. Television is largely an urban medium.
The Internet is even in South Africa used by only 11.6 percent of the population. Only 5.3 percent of the total African population has access to the Net. [5] The countries with more than 10 percent Internet penetration were Algeria (10.4), Egypt (10.5), Mauritius (26.7), Morocco (21.3), Reunion (FR) (27.4), São Tomé & Principé (11.2), Seychelles (38.9) and South Africa 11.6). Twenty-two countries had an Internet penetration rate of less than 2 percent. Patterns of unequal distribution are equally evident for mobile phones, where mobile penetration is highest in South Africa, Morocco, Egypt, Algeria, Tunisia, which all except for Egypt had a penetration of over 50 percent in 2007 – a little less than the double of the continental average.
I still do not think internet and blogs are the reason why this publications are folding though Kusadikika may be onto something when he talked about a lack of multi - faceted revenue stream.
In my opinion we lack critical thinkers in majority of our sectors and in this particular case it becomes an uphill task to maintain readership.Until we challenge the norm and stop using "retreads" then we will continue reading this stories.
I am appalled at an advert in Supersport that depicts a man in Angola in 2037 talking bout how the world cup was in Africa and from where he seated to me does not depict 2037...surely what were you guys smoking!!!
The greatest danger in times of turbulence is not the turbulence; it is to act with yesterday's logic.