By The Daily Item
SUNBURY — Starting Monday, you can read every word, view every photo, scan every advertisement and enjoy every comic strip published in The Daily Item right on your computer.
The newspaper is pleased to launch its "e-edition," an exact digital copy of the print version of The Daily Item. The e-edition enables you to click on any page of the newspaper and view it as an Adobe PDF file. With easy to use tools, you can enlarge or reduce the size of each page, scroll up and down, move the page around, jump from page to page as you choose or search for a specific edition, page, word, headline or phrase.
Delivery is a snap "“ or should we say, a click.
Just log in on your computer starting at 6 each morning for the most recent edition, or pull down menus that can take you to a previous editions dating to Dec. 1.
Instant access to your entire hometown newspaper will be great for those on vacation or living elsewhere, including retirees in Arizona, California or Florida and college students who want to keep up on the news from back home. The search functions will appeal to family members who surf the Web and are looking for detailed and accurate information and for the grandparents who don't want to miss one single mention of their kids in the news.
The Daily Item's e-edition will be available free for a two-week trial starting Monday. To log on, go to our Website at www.dailyitem.com and click on the "e-edition" icon.
Following the two-week trial period ending on Jan. 18, the e-edition will be available at the newspaper's standard subscription rate. To subscribe, just follow the instructions on the e-edition's log-in page.
Our free Website at www.dailyitem.com will continue doing what it does best "” bringing you the latest news, sports and multimedia offerings along with a number of popular advertising, social, informational and multimedia sections. With the launch of the e-edition, the free Website will focus primarily on new or late-breaking news and information happening today and into the future. The site also features local video, photo galleries, podcasts and late-breaking news alerts transmitted through Twitter and Facebook.