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Tag: ai

Future Trends in Digital Magazine Publishing: What Lies Ahead?

If the phrase “digital magazine” brings to your mind a text-based publication accompanied by images, filled with hyperlinks, and read on a computer, tablet, or smartphone, it’s time to update this perception. The following model of online publishing is becoming a thing of the past, making way for a far more immersive, multisensory experience. A new era is emerging – let’s get ready for it.

When online magazines started coexisting alongside print (becoming one of the hottest trends in publishing), we could see a clear distinction between “traditional publishing” and “digital publishing”. There was no doubt about which was which.

At that time, we were defining “digital publishing” as the electronic counterpart of a traditional magazine, accessible on digital devices such as computers, tablets, and smartphones. It could take various forms, from simple PDF files to interactive publications enriched with multimedia elements like videos, animations, audio, or interactive infographics.

Their strongest features that distinguished them from the paper were enormous possibilities of interactivity, readers’ engagement, content personalization, social media integration, and data analysis.

Today, the latest technological changes may be disrupting this well-known category of digital magazines, dividing it into “traditional online publishing” and… well, what exactly?

ChatGPT and Magazine Publishers — New Friendship in the Business World

The artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot called ChatGPT, which has taken the world by storm, increasingly boldly enters the publishing business. Although it’s not perfect and still needs a lot of improvement, we can already say that it has significant potential to drive the next revolution of the digital magazine world.

Along with announcing the release of the free version of ChatGPT, the public went on reconnaissance — to be more specific, 100 million users in just over two months since launch. People logged in to get answers to the most diverse questions that could pop into their heads. The Internet has been flooded with screenshots of these (sometimes ridiculous) dialogues. The result? Some said there was nothing to be fascinated with, others, on the contrary, that there is unlimited potential in this tool.

So, who is right?

Basically, both. The ChatGPT needs a lot of improvement and at this point, it is not able to fully replace full-time employees. However, it can help them a lot, especially if we are talking about magazine publishers.