
apple news
Bad News: Apple ❤️ Taboola
Apple is letting the king of the chum boxes into its news app.
apple news
Apple is letting the king of the chum boxes into its news app.
apple news
Despite all the early scepticism, Apple News is now the most used UK news app. Time to stop ignoring it.
news review
Six stories from around the web that will inform your audience strategy.
apple
What does a fried egg have to do with the Wall Street Journal and Apple News+? It's all about your most important content…
social & digital lunchbreak
A storm in a teacup around changes coming to Apple's news app, some thoughts on Reels, and a toxicity round-up. Happy Monday!
apple news
Quick first impressions of the launch of Apple News+
apple news
Tim Cook revealed the latest Apple News user figures in Apple's earnings call.
apple news
Apple has acquired a major US digital magazine subscription service. If you needed evidence it was serious about Apple News, this is it. But does this mean publishers should take Apple News more seriously?
analytics
I woke to unexpectedly happy news this morning – one of my (meagre) blog posts from last week had killed it on traffic: That’s a normal week’s worth of traffic on a single post. Not bad. And I was completely unaware until that point. Why? Because all the traffic
apple
The Telegraph is seeing substantial reader growth – from Apple News [http://digiday.com/media/apple-news-the-telegraph/]: > For The Telegraph, Apple News has become the most effective third-party platform at driving readers to its own sites and app — where it can eventually turn them into subscribers. (Note the contrast here to
ambient news
Some big news hitting about Apple News – the news reading app that ships with all iOS devices. The Washington Post [https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2016/03/15/apple-news-is-now-open-to-publishers-of-all-sizes/] : > Apple is getting really serious about the publishing business. The company announced Tuesday that it’s rolling out
apple news
Apple’s Eddie Cue, speaking to CNN’s Brian Stelter: > “We’ve only created the apps that we think everyone uses every day… We really wanted to create a single app that all customers could go to, to read all their news — no matter what they are interested in,