h1. tt comment oct 28, 2015 #media #toledo #design bq. *jimavolt :* _"Without their opinions and occasional news being delivered in printed format, the Blade will become a one-sided Swampbubbles, where loud mouths simply post passages that piss on the thoughts and convictions of others. Do we need another troll taking up bandwidth?"_ Could you elaborate? I don't understand. Are you talking about Facebook comments that may exist at the bottom of a Blade web article or something else? bq. *foodie88 :* _"Also, for some reason it takes longer to read the entire paper online. I just don't like the way it's set up. It's probably all about the first reason I mentioned. I'm old. Sigh."_ No, it's not user error. It sounds like a design flaw in how the digital content is displayed. Can you also elaborate? Which digital property were you trying to access at the Blade: * eBlade * native app * mobile website * desktop/laptop website Why do you think that it takes longer? Is is the font size, font type, layout, etc? A lot of so-called "old" people read books on a Kindle or on a regular tablet and even a phone. Why can "old" people read books on a smallish digital device, but news stories are somehow clunky to read on a mobile device? If I was king of the Blade, I would start over and eliminate all current digital offerings and then "build only one main website for all stories.":http://toledotalk.com/cgi-bin/tt.pl/article/194907#194952 At most, I would allow the native mobile app to exist too if it provided real value to readers. But I also like the idea of creating niche websites that have their own domain names, such as this story project that the Blade produced this year: http://www.littlesyriatoledo.com foodie88, if you accessed the littlesyriatoledo.com link on a mobile device or on a laptop/desktop, is that site also clunky to read? Anyway, the main website would contain all stories, produced by the Blade, but I would also try cross-posting some of those stories to small, Blade-owned websites that have their own domain names and would be narrowly focused and possibly temporary or seasonal, such as a Toledo Area Food Scene site, a 2015 Toledo Election site, and a Toledo Winter Weather site. It's not quite unbundling since the stories on the narrowly-focused sites would still exist at the main site. If collecting and renewing domains names sounds like a pain, then use sub-domains. But hopefully, the content management system would permit each "site" to be themed differently.