Revision as of 06:22, 11 June 2009 editPasswordUsername (talk | contribs)5,580 editsmNo edit summary← Previous edit | Revision as of 07:38, 11 June 2009 edit undoDigwuren (talk | contribs)11,308 editsNo edit summaryNext edit → | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''''Eesti Ekspress''''' was the first politically independent newspaper in |
'''''Eesti Ekspress''''' was the first politically independent newspaper in late ] ]<ref>European Forum on Science Journalism, , p61 </ref>. Making use of ]'s policies of ] and ], it was established as a weekly newspaper in 1989 by ] and others. In essentially the same format, although with a number of appendices, it is still issued every Thursday. | ||
The newspaper has broken a number of important stories and been known for its innovation-mindedness. Considerably thicker than other newspapers of the late Soviet era, it was one of the first to make use of ] technologies and ]. Consequently, it has been notorious for popularising the incorrect usage of 'sh' and 'zh' in substitution of the characters 'š' and ž', which in late 1980s were rather inconvenient for computer processing but appear in a number of Estonian loanwords (e.g. ''garaaž'', borrowed from French '']'') and names transliterated from Slavic languages, most importantly, ]. | The newspaper has broken a number of important stories and been known for its innovation-mindedness. Considerably thicker than other newspapers of the late Soviet era, it was one of the first to make use of ] technologies and ]. Consequently, it has been notorious for popularising the incorrect usage of 'sh' and 'zh' in substitution of the characters 'š' and ž', which in late 1980s were rather inconvenient for computer processing but appear in a number of Estonian loanwords (e.g. ''garaaž'', borrowed from French '']'') and names transliterated from Slavic languages, most importantly, ]. |
Revision as of 07:38, 11 June 2009
Eesti Ekspress was the first politically independent newspaper in late Soviet-occupied Estonia. Making use of Gorbachev's policies of perestroika and glasnost, it was established as a weekly newspaper in 1989 by Hans H. Luik and others. In essentially the same format, although with a number of appendices, it is still issued every Thursday.
The newspaper has broken a number of important stories and been known for its innovation-mindedness. Considerably thicker than other newspapers of the late Soviet era, it was one of the first to make use of digital publishing technologies and photographic typesetting. Consequently, it has been notorious for popularising the incorrect usage of 'sh' and 'zh' in substitution of the characters 'š' and ž', which in late 1980s were rather inconvenient for computer processing but appear in a number of Estonian loanwords (e.g. garaaž, borrowed from French garage) and names transliterated from Slavic languages, most importantly, Russian.
External links
References
- European Forum on Science Journalism, Overview of science reporting in the EU, p61
This European newspaper-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |