i'm not so sure the paper book is dead - there is something tactile about holding it and thumbing through it - how exactly do you flip backwards through an e-book to see if you want to buy it? now do that 20 times and tell me you don't need a bookshop....where is the serendipity in searching for a book title you already know about...? (and yes I get all the reasons why ebooks are great)
we have a few hundred 'real' cookbooks and love to use them - who wants to make a lazy weekend dinner for the family using an iPad? I want to feel the book, see the greasy spots from the last time I made that recipe, perch the book up in its stand - its the whole experience of using MY book that I love.
news media in print = slow death - I get that - even quality papers like The Daily Telegraph need online stores, advertisers, cross-sponsorship deals with supermarkets etc etc to survive - if you want quality journalism then you make a commitment to paying for it on a personal level I guess
there are new startups with new models in the journalism space - but I don't see anybody opening a print newspaper anytime soon...