Electronic publishers are also angling to make readers pay for the information they use.
The difficulty comes in determining what readers will pay for on the Web.
But they are finding that readers will pay for sports, if the Web offers more than the printed page.
The drama is heightened, and the reader will pay close attention because it isn't quite what he or she expected.
The price of magazine subscriptions on the Fire are higher than what readers would pay in print.
If readers paid more attention to the letter in a particular position, they would experience the adverse word superiority effect.
I see what my friends and the readers are paying for their tickets.
Still, only a few thousand readers could pay the subscription price of several hundred dollars a year.
They require no postage and the reader pays full price.
Publishers stand to see demand fall as readers pay more.