Between 2011 and 2016, I tuned the SW bands every night, and sometimes early mornings as well.
Back then (I hate using that term, but it applies), I thoroughly enjoyed hearing 11 Meter CB operators from Latin America in the 'outband' frequencies during the afternoons; Saturday afternoons hearing Voz Cristiana from Chile; Radio Exterior De España on 19 meters with classical and flamenco music and European, Castilian Spanish; the BBC from Singapore in English broadcasting to Asia; ham pirates ("village radio") from Kalimantan in Indonesia during the early mornings; hams on 20 and 40 meters most nights, including the slow CW you'd hear in the former novice bands.
I'd hear legit hams from Indonesia calling Japan and the US on early mornings in the lower parts of the 40 meter band, along with the Russian single letter beacons further up -- and most of these catches on just my DX-390, 398 or 440 using a 25 foot indoor wire. Between 2015 and 2016 I was hearring Vividh Bharati and China broadcasting to Europe from Kashgar -- on just my Grundig G2, just off the whip.
Then the sun went down the drain, and stations also cut hours and/or went off the air.
I stopped tuning nightly about the 50th time I heard nothing but static, WRMI, and Cuba. That was some time in 2017 or very early 2018. I don't tune the SW band anymore. Nothing to hear, really, until the sun increases its output. I might fire up the G2 and tune a couple SW bands at night, maybe every three weeks? I always know what I'm going to hear.
By the way, the sun has been gradually decreasing its output over the last three solar cycles. It's incremental, but there is a NASA chart showing how each of the recent cycles' peaks are lower than the previous one, since around 2002.
I haven't bought a SW magazine since probably 2012 or 2014, during one of the last times I went into a Barnes & Noble, and saw a couple mags were still publishing. They were priced higher than the previous time I'd bought one, and as the Recession was still on, I didn't have a ton of money to spend. Even so, I bought one. It felt even then like the end of an era, because I could see then the writing on the wall.
This is one reason I still DX the MW even if I don't really feel like it. I still hear the same 250 stations every night but at least something is there that's distant, and it's still pleasant to tune around and hear what's coming in one evening or morning that wasn't there the previous couple.
As for printed materials versus the internet, I rely on my ears first, and log down what I hear in my logbook. If I am not sure what I heard, I will look it up later -- first on my personal MW station log, and then on my computer listing which I got from a now-defunct AM DX website -- a text file I keep updated with format and call changes.
After that, maybe I'll use an internet source. With SW I'll use Short-wave.info or EiBi. I have EiBi listings saved on my tablet computer browser, which I usually keep handy. I don't even have to have the WiFi on to pull it up and see what I might have heard -- on that rare occasion that when I tune the SW bands I actually hear something.
Medium wave, I'll wait til I'm on the computer, and look something up if I'm not sure what I heard.
And that's how things have progressed, I guess. I think if the sun was more cooperative, the SW hobby might look a little brighter. I know there are stations broadcasting still, over on the other side of the world. It's just that you need a large rhombic in your back 40 to hear them, until the sun cooperates.