dead tree edition
n. The paper version of an online newspaper, magazine or journal.
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Examples
2002
The drawback of listening to the latest in Jean Auel's cave-lit series is that you can't skim. . . . In the print version, lingerers and masochists can read every word of such passages. The rest can digest it with a glance and get on with the action.
—Sandy Bauers, “Latest in Auel's series is better in dead-tree edition,” The Philadelphia Inquirer, June 02, 2002
1995 (earliest)

The Los Angeles Times is on Prodigy under the name TimesLink and, like its parent, is filled with lengthy stories on every imaginable topic. But this strong content is trapped inside one of the ugliest and most confusing user interfaces I've seen on an electronic paper. The opening screen sports 20 buttons, a clunky and juvenile Prodigy-style illustration and a garish ad. That said, there's a lot here, including much material that goes beyond what's in the dead-tree edition.
—Walter S. Mossberg, “Newspapers Go Online to Save the Industry,” The Wall Street Journal, March 23, 1995
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