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DBpedia 2014

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Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { ?s ?p The Photographer's Mail was the only commercial photography industry publication in New Zealand. It was a monthly broadsheet newspaper published eleven times a year, that was distributed free to the professional photography community.The magazine was purchased by Parkside Media in 2007 to complement D-Photo magazine which focuses more on consumer and enthusiast photography.Parkside Media's offices are in Grey Lynn, Auckland, New Zealand.In January 2010, it was announced that 'Parkside Media has decided to suspend publication of The Photographer's Mail for the time being' in a statement from the editor, published in the forums of the sister title D-Photo.From the statement: 'For the last 19 years, The Photographer’s Mail has been a free publication, almost entirely dependent on advertising support to continue operation. A number of different factors have meant the photography industry squeezed margins and dropped profits over the last year, which ultimately saw former advertisers unable to support the magazine.This decrease is advertising spend has meant that Parkside Media can no longer produce TPM in its current format and will suspend publication until support returns to levels where a free-to-reader publication once again becomes viable.However, a magazine with a twenty-year history and a loyal readership shouldn't simply disappear overnight. It's been an important industry bulletin and that role is an invaluable one. A new section in D-Photo, D-Photo Pro will pick up much of the news and commentary that formerly appeared in the monthly. D-Photo's popularity has been readily increasing, and hopefully this new section will help improve that trend. First appearing in the April/May 2010 issue, the D-Photo Pro will provide the professional photography industry its essential voice.In addition, a regular online version of TPM will continue to be distributed, with much of the same content, save the physical product. At this stage, a 16-page PDF, emailed to all interested industry professionals and suppliers will be scheduled for a February release.This is a new dawn for TPM and it will return to its current format as soon as market conditions allow. The new formats will continue to serve the entire industry as it has the past 19 years, not all change is bad.'. }

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