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iOS 9's Apple News expands publisher reach as readership climbs toward 40 million. ( iOS Assistance )
iOS 9's Apple News expands publisher reach as readership climbs toward 40 million. ( iOS Assistance )
iOS 9's Apple News expands publisher reach as readership climbs toward 40 million.
Apple News is
already seeing strong adoption, with more than twice as many readers as
Apple Music has listeners — no doubt because News is effortless to use,
with no subscription plan or signup required. Apple is now expanding
News app's publisher base by publicly documenting its underlying "Apple
News Format" specification.
Apple News Format
enables publishers to create dynamic, animated multimedia content their
readers can access through iOS 9's new Apple News app, using simple
markup.
Until now, Apple has limited access to its Apple News Format to a small group of publishing partners (including ESPN, The New York Times, Condé Nast publications and Hearst newspapers) as it worked out the final details.
Other publishers have been limited to submitting an RSS feed of their
stories, which allows News readers to access only basic textual content
and a link to the original web page that takes users out of the app,
bypassing its features.
Condé Nast's Wired took advantage of the Apple News Format last month to publish
an exclusive, dynamic feature written by Andrew Rice detailing an
in-depth look at Bjarke Ingels Group, the architect behind New York
City's $4 billion World Trade Center 2 project.
Now that the format is now open to all Apple News publishers, others can
begin to format their articles with layouts that make use of app's
advanced typography and iOS fonts; interactive photo galleries; in-line
videos and animations; and modern layout conventions that involve motion
and parallax effects."Nearly 40 million people are reading Apple News, and we've been getting very positive feedback from the publishers" - Tim Cook
In yesterday's conference call, Apple's chief executive Tim Cook noted
that, "our iOS News app is off to a great start: Nearly 40 million
people are reading Apple News, and we've been getting very positive
feedback from the publishers."
Cook added, "we have now signed more than 70 publishers representing
hundreds of titles, and we're happy to announce that News just launched
in the United Kingdom and Australia with partners such as the BBC, News
Corp, The Telegraph, The Guardian, Financial Times, Daily Mail and the Australian Broadcasting Service."
The rise of digital publishing leaves behind Flash
When iPad first appeared back in 2010, many periodical publishers —
including Condé Nast — had Adobe-centric workflows that expected to
deliver interactive digital magazines for mobile devices using Adobe Flash. The lack of Flash support on iOS prompted Condé Nast to instead publish a bulky app composed of high resolution pictures of its physical magazine, with more rudimentary navigation than a basic web page.
Publishers began looking for new alternatives to digital publishing as
their basic "digital image" editions of existing magazines for iPad failed to garner much interest.
In 2011, Apple launched its "Newsstand" initiative as part of iOS 5.
Newsstand sought to create an App Store-like market for digital
newspapers and magazines delivered as subscription-based apps, enabling
publishers to concentrate on content on top of the features of Apple's
iOS platform.
Rather than being an app itself, Newsstand was essentially a special iOS
folder Apple used to deliver publishers' subscriptions-based apps to
users in the background, as new editions became available.
One problem for Newsstand was that publishers still needed to build full iOS apps to deliver each edition of their content.
One content publisher, the monthly travel magazine Trvl,
decided that its Adobe InDesign workflow (like Condé Nast's) was not
going to work because it generated such large app downloads that buyers
"really hated us," in the words of the firm's co-founder Michel Elings.
The Netherlands-based company set out to build a custom tool optimized for digital publishing on iOS, resulting in Prss.
The company called its tool "the software Apple forgot to make," and
launched plans to license it to other publishers, enabling them to
create digital magazine apps that were a tenth the size of typical
graphic apps exported from InDesign.
The software caught the attention of Apple over the course of the next year, and the company was subsequently acquired
by the iPad-maker. Apparently fueled by Prss talent, Apple News shipped
with iOS 9 earlier this year as a rich, efficient publishing medium
that doesn't require publishers to package each edition of their work as
an iOS app.
Instead, publishers can apply rich formatting with Markup, incorporating
interactive and video content. Apple News then renders their content as
multimedia articles users can favorite, share with friends or save for
offline reading, using bookmarks that are iCloud-synced between a user's
devices.
Apple News recommends articles of interest based on stories you've
previously read, favorited or shared, in addition to the news channels
and topics you explicitly select to follow.
Social news, recommended like songs
Apple News presents publishers' content, not as periodic editions, but
as a user-customized stream of articles organized by topic. This not
only mimics the modern consumption model of Facebook rather than
emulating printed paper periodicals, but also bears some similarity to
iTunes' disruptive shift in selling individual songs rather than
packaged albums.
The result is that users can read and share news presented like a social
network feed, but that each article has a consistent set of features
that display within the app, rather than linking to disparate outside
websites.
"The app cuts out the cruft, ad trackers and other elements found on many news sites that can slow loading times," observed Owen Williams of TheNextWeb.
Publishers can adopt iAd or their own ad network for content
monetization within Apple News rather than trying to sell downloadable
subscriptions.
Apple News readers can also follow a specific news channel, providing an
experience more similar to a digital magazine or paper.
"For small publishers that simply don't have the resources to build
their own native apps, it's a huge opportunity to play in the big
leagues and get content in front of more people without having to spend
any money," Williams added.
Another aspect of Apple News is that it's optimized to fully exploit the
Retina Display of modern iPhones and iPads, something that basic
websites often aren't.
Apple announced at the release of iOS 9 that existing Newsstand
subscription apps would continue to work, but that the Newsstand folder
would not longer appear by default. New subscription editions are now
downloaded as standalone apps.
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