- Zinio, an ePublishing pioneer whose electronic newsstand competes with both Apple and Amazon, is looking for a buyer, according to Fortune Magazine. The company has hired Montgomery & Co. to manage the process, and is trying to sell itself for $50 to $100 million. There's no word on whether there's any interest from potential buyers.
- Flipboard, the tablet eMagazine/aggregator that just added an Android version alongside its popular iPad/iPhone app, won one and lost two today: According to paidContent, The New York Times will make the full contents of its newspaper available through Flipboard. Paid subscribers will have access to all the articles, while non-subscribers will have access to a limited number of free articles and additional ones through a paywall.
- On the other hand, Ad Age reports that two Conde Nast magazines, Wired and The New Yorker, will stop selling advertising through Flipboard, and will instead only make headlines and a few sentences of each article available through the app. Clicking on the article will either load the Wired or New Yorker app if it's installed, or tell the user to subscribe in order to get the full article. It's not clear whether Conde Nast changed its approach because advertising sales through Flipboard weren't working, or because the publisher wants to focus solely on its own apps.
Showing posts with label Flipboard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flipboard. Show all posts
Monday, June 25, 2012
Mixed news on the tablet eMagazine front
There's been some mixed news concerning tablet eMagazines today:
Labels:
Advertising Age,
Android,
apple,
Flipboard,
New York Times,
New Yorker,
Time,
Wired,
Zinio
Sunday, December 05, 2010
Episode 5 of the Feldman File videoblog is live!
This week's episode of the Feldman File videoblog is live on YouTube! If you can't see it here, click here to view it in your browser. Here are the stories in this week's show:
- Google's $6 billion offer for Groupon is rejected, but it acquires DRM specialist Widevine
- Verizon Wireless fires up its LTE broadband network and launches its first devices
- Comcast extends its agreement to acquire NBC Universal and contends with complaints from Level 3 and Zoom Telephonics
- Adobe releases the first beta of Flash Player 10.2
- The U.S. Justice Department is forced to drop charges against an accused Xbox 360 modder
- Flipboard adds HTML5 support and advertising
Labels:
Adobe,
Comcast,
FCC,
Flash Player,
Flipboard,
Google,
Groupon,
HTML5,
Level 3,
LTE,
U.S. Department of Justice,
Verizon Wireless,
Widevine,
Xbox 360,
Zoom Telephonics
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