Apple is
buying digital magazine subscription service Texture which will add to the side of its business aimed at making money from online content or services.
Apple announced Monday it is
buying digital magazine subscription service Texture, adding to the side of its business aimed at making money from online content or services.
Not exact matches
Apple is
buying a firm called Next Issue Media, which makes Texture, a service that provides a bundled
subscription for hundreds of
digital magazines.
If you dig the entire
digital magazine experience and elect to
buy a one year
subscription to your favorite publication, you get a second one for free.
Any
digital magazine published using the Adobe Publishing Suite or the Adobe Reader are finding their apps are either crashing or prompting users to
buy the issue, even if they have an active
subscription.
Here's how it'd work: There'd be a new company running a
digital store for all of the publishers where people could
buy and manage their
magazine subscriptions that would be delivered on «any» device.
Digital (replica) editions accessed through digital newsstands (reader apps) have long been an affordable way for publishers to provide value - added features to simple replica editions and offers readers interactive functions such as the ability to browse and buy subscriptions to magazines as well as to read them, bookmark, search
Digital (replica) editions accessed through
digital newsstands (reader apps) have long been an affordable way for publishers to provide value - added features to simple replica editions and offers readers interactive functions such as the ability to browse and buy subscriptions to magazines as well as to read them, bookmark, search
digital newsstands (reader apps) have long been an affordable way for publishers to provide value - added features to simple replica editions and offers readers interactive functions such as the ability to browse and
buy subscriptions to
magazines as well as to read them, bookmark, search, etc..
This seems to be the reason why Hearst
Magazines forces readers to
buy digital subscriptions even if they are print subscriber — they want that reader to migrate to
digital, and don't want to lose the revenue when they do so.
Subscription start as low as # 10 for four months counting both print and
digital editions across a swathe of
magazines, so you can save a ton of cash on
buying individual issues, AND you get the voucher on top (Nice).