Description
In the latest edition:
• Car Clubs & hOUR Cars
• Battery-powered trains
• Nano-Brompton 2.0 Revisited
• iBoost
• Romancing the Stones
• PLUS: Letters, news and a selection of second hand bikes
The debate on the future of the printed page rages on. In the 20 years we’ve been producing magazines, the economics have changed quite a bit (printing is cheaper, and post more expensive), but the real change – especially in the last two to three years – has been in the content. In a world where Google and tablets and broadband can put more or less everything at your fingertips in micro-seconds (on a good day), a magazine offering opinions on transport and delivered by post every eight weeks seems rather quaint. But we’re still here, and although paper continues to lose ground to digital, the vast majority of A to B subscribers still opt for the paper magazine.Will paper survive? If it keeps the interest of readers, and doesn’t price itself out of existence.
DAVID HENSHAW
3.9 MB PDF