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I do, however, applaud this statement: "I want to read about characters doing stuff, not geography, architecture, or magic systems." Likewise I don't like to read three viewpoint characters and find only one of their story arcs interesting.

Well put, and absolutely true. You can't just be completely self-indulgent unless you happen to be one of those rare people who's tastes are somehow completely in tune with what the public wants. The public seems to have wanted greats like The Beatles and the Harry Potter novels, but they seem also to have become obsessed with lesser lights (fill in the blank with your most despised musical or literary artist).
If you're not true to your own vision, I don't think you will succeed, so it is a fine line.

There is a tendency for writers, especially beginning writers, to equate short stories with the initial process of becoming a writer. They think they must master the short story, get published in some magazines or anthologies, and then they can move on to writing novels. Most of the time it doesn't work that way. They're two different art forms and require the development of different skills.
Read Peter S. Beagle. He's one of the few writers I've found who can skillfully handle short stories, novellas and full-blown novels. He also hasn't jumped on the doorstop bandwagon - I applaud him.

I'm curious why the markets died though - was it due to lack of sales because the quality of the stories were poor, the specialized nature of most magazines, or some other factor(s)?
If there is too much fat in people's writing these days, the editors must be held accountable as well. Either they're not doing their jobs, or they're purposely encouraging overdone story telling. It's obvious, in the case of certain authors, that as they become well known and sought after, their books get edited down less and less.

Well, what about the other characters, or learning how the mystery unveils, or seeing HOW the characters get through? When you sit down with a Sherlock Holmes story, or watch an episode of Star Trek, or read a James Bond novel, you can be fairly sure that Watson, Bond, and Kirk will survive. Does that eliminate the tension? It's a silly argument.
Personally, my preference would be to write a series of standalones with recurring characters. That's what I've written so far. But I'm not sure the vast majority of fantasy readers want that today.
I do wish I understood better why the short story market was so dead. I've said before, and will say again, that as busy as we all are, you'd think that people would find time to read short stories. But that's not the way it is. I think most of the people reading the short story zines right now are writers wanting to get published in those zines...

Visibility is surely a problem. There is just SO MUCH stuff out there now that it becomes white noise. I have no idea how to break through it -- reviews don't seem to do the trick, even from prestigious places.
I will probably be exploring e-stories in the near(ish) future myself.
I love long books, but much prefer concise, polished little volumes. In the end, in my case, I don't think so much of my preferences that I can wholly ignore the wishes of the people I write for—the ones who live outside my own head.
You can write for both, but where the preferences of one conflict with the philosophy of the other, I submit to the reader, however wrong it feels.
It's an opportunity to subvert something. Which...
*grin*