When I would be in Columbus for my annual trek to Mopar Nationals, I'd always get the Dispatch to read and see what was going on up there. Always liked it, especially the coverage of the then-last department store closing in downtown Columbus.
With a print version, you can wander back and forth to read things, especially the classified ads for cars and such. With the online version, more segmented in what you see.
Bad thing about print versions, disposing of them after you read them. Went to the online version of the local, smaller town newspaper, now owned by a regional conglomerate of other similar papers. It's in a full page format, so you see it all, but can look at articles in a larger size for better reading. Easy to navigate.
I used to subscribe to many car magazines. Hot Rod, Motor Trend, Car Life, Cad and Driver, Road and Track, and bought some others at the newsstand, as I desired. Car Life got absorbed into Motor Trend about 1970 or so. Hot Rod got a then-new editor and things changed a bit, especially after Peterson Publications sold out. Last one I stopped subscribing to was Car and Driver. I used to get new subscription offers, or extension offers, to where it was very cost-effective to do so. I ended up with about 10 years of paid subscriptions at one time. Then I evolved into a "buy what you want" rather than a subscription. As the archived magazines grew too much. Then some of the editors at C&D changed and I didn't like it as much. Cars and such changed too. PLUS, in more recent times, the print size seems to have decreased significantly! Harder to read than in prior times. I now look at HotRod.com when I get the itch to do so. Now they are all in a "network" of sorts with all of the buy-outs over the years. And there are even better online magazines, as
www.EngineLabs.com (and all that it's connected to).
My grand plan is to scan lots of those old magazines for
www.wildaboutcarsonline.com, as a contribution to their projects. Haven't got there yet. Then I'll probably sell them on eBay or similar. Of particular interst would be the many parts catalogs I accumulated when most auto supplies started moving toward a computerized catalog format. Some of those old PerfectCircle/Dana/Spicer books are priceless as they were printed in the later '60s-middle '70s eras. Back before many things were later superceded into "combined applications" rather than OEM-specific applications. Ought to keep me out of trouble in my "retirement"?
Like the printed format, just the issues of what to do after you read them.
CBODY67