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Give it time, I suppose...There's been more There weren't too many rowdy fans congregating on the site when I looked – and I’d argue that the most impressive step forward The Telegraph has taken is probably around its multimedia provision, with audio analysis from the likes of Simon Hughes and video coverage of events like Flintoff's mea culpa news conference.Indeed, The Telegraph is not the only newspaper to have ramped up its web presence for the CWC.
Everywhere you look you can see old media operations making the mad dash to the new frontier of the internet.
With print circulation falling, the papers are starting to act as 24/7 media providers and - at least in theory - are placing the web at the heart of their cricket services.
The lines are increasingly becoming blurred as traditional broadcasters like ourselves and Sky provide more and more written journalism, at exactly the time that newspapers like The Times and The Sun are beginning to market themselves as expert purveyors of audio-video content.
All this convergence on the web is fascinating for the media anorak, as the old certainties and traditions are rapidly destroyed by new technology and changing audience behaviour.
But it's also great news for the cricket fan.
The days of having to sit in front of page 341 of Ceefax watching the s...
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