feb 07

Nearly 65 percent of U.S. magazines now have a digital replica edition, but those editions make up just under three percent of overall circulation: That’s the latest news from the Alliance for Audited Media (formerly the Audit Bureau of Circulations), which on Thursday released its report on U.S. magazine circulation in the second half of 2012. For some individual titles, digital growth was a lot more impressive — though in some cases that’s because they’re giving away the digital edition free.

289 U.S. magazines reported that they’d sold 7.9 million digital replica editions in the last six months of 2012. That’s 2.4 percent of total circulation — up from less than 1 percent in the second half of 2011, and up from 1.7 percent in the first six months of this year. (AAM’s definition of a digital replica is that it contains “the same editorial and photojournalism as the national print edition,” though that material can be arranged differently on a tablet; nearly all digital magazines fall into this category.)

The growth looks more impressive on an individual title level, where some magazines made huge gains in digital copies: Game Informer, already by far the top magazine by digital circulation, increased that figure by 89 percent, while Cosmopolitan upped its digital circulation by nearly 40 percent in the second half of the year. Two Reader’s Digest titles – Reader’s Digest and Taste of Home — saw triple-digit-percentage growth of their digital editions, both entering the top 10 for the first time. The growth isn’t all paid: Reader’s Digest, for example, is offering print subscribers a free six-month iPad subscription. But Hearst sells digital and print subscriptions separately.

Here are the top 25 U.S. consumer magazines by digital circulation as of December 31, 2012, and how much that circulation grew (or shrank) over the first six months of the year. The Alliance for Audited Media cautions that these are preliminary figures, subject to audit.

  1. Game Informer (GameStop), digital circulation: 2,305,816 (+89% over first half of 2012)
  2. Maxim (Alpha Media Group): 259,529 (-8.9%)
  3. Cosmopolitan (Hearst): 254,751 (+37.2%)
  4. National Geographic (National Geographic): 160,077 (+18.9%)
  5. Poder Hispanic (Televisa): 149,838 (-12.3%)
  6. Reader’s Digest (Reader’s Digest): 147,149 (+248.8%)
  7. Taste of Home (Reader’s Digest): 103,961 (+243.9%)
  8. Popular Science (Bonnier): 98,389 (+5.8%)
  9. ESPN the Magazine (ESPN): 92,197 (+20.4%)
  10. OK! (American Media): 88,347 (+86.7%)
  11. Parenting (Bonnier): 87,253 (+16.7%)
  12. Men’s Health (Rodale): 85,842 (+44.2%)
  13. O, the Oprah Magazine (Hearst): 84,632 (+4.2%)
  14. Wired (Condé Nast): 84,118 (+22.3%)
  15. Us Weekly (Wenner Media): 81,611 (+40.8%)
  16. Nylon (Jaclynn B. Jarrett): 77,469 (+2.5%)
  17. GQ (Condé Nast): 74,806  (+24.6%)
  18. Food Network Magazine (Hearst): 67,727 (+65.1%)
  19. Women’s Health (Rodale): 66,555 (+29.5%)
  20. Star (American Media): 59,903 (+297%)
  21. New Yorker (Condé Nast): 59,471 (+66.7%)
  22. Esquire (Condé Nast Hearst): 57,795 (+41.7%)
  23. Martha Stewart Living (Time Inc.): 56,068 (+28.7%)
  24. Glamour (Condé Nast): 53,794 (+56.8%)
  25. Vanity Fair (Condé Nast): 53,735 (+47.6%)

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giu 12

Apple announces 2012 design award winners

At WWDC 2012, Apple held an event where they announced the winners of the Apple Design Awards. Each winner won a special ADA winner lanyard, a MacBook Air, a new iPad, an iPod touch, and an ADA trophy. Developers were were awarded from the following categories: Student, Mac, iPhone, and iPad. Winners were chosen based off the following criteria:

  • Well-Designed -- Apps that are inviting, engaging, easy to use, intuitive, and compelling.
  • State of the Art -- Apps that take advantage of the latest hardware, OS releases, and technologies to offer rich functionality, high performance, and extensive system integration.
  • Innovative -- Apps that are revolutionary, inspiring, and do things in new and creative ways.

So without further adieu, here are the winners!

Student Category

Little Star by BiBoBox

daWindci by Reality Twist GmbH

Mac Category

Deus Ex: Human Revolution - Ultimate Edition by Feral Interactive

Sketch by Bohemian Coding

LIMBO by Playdead

iPhone Category

Jetpack Joyride by Halfbrick Studios

National Parks by National Geographic

Where's My Water by Disney

iPad Category

Paper by 53

Paper for iPad review

Bobo Explores Light by Game Collage

DM1 - The Drum Machine by Fingerlab

Huge congratulations to all the winners! Well deserved.



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apr 23

If you’re planning a trip to a national park or want to learn more about one, National Parks by National Geographic is a gorgeous guide for your iPhone that offers beautiful photography and loads of information, including photo tips, park secrets, must-see attractions, and things to do.

Included with National Parks is one free guide to the national park of your choice. Additional guides can be downloaded for $0.99 or $1.99 each. Park info, camping and lodging information, maps, weather, stats, and a few photos are included with each national park without purchasing its guide. Included with each guide is photo tips, park secrets, what to see, and what to do sections as well as many addition photos. These photos will also be added to the photos section of the app.

When viewing a national park’s page, you will find a photo gallery at the top that can be scrolled though. Tapping on the photo will strip away the distractions by opening it on a black background and also give more information about the photograph in a caption underneath it.

Back on the main screen national park screen, the photo gallery is overlaid with a weather icon and a stats icon. Tapping on these will pop up their respective information. The weather section shows the current conditions and a 5-day forecast. The stats section shows the number of visitors, the park size, and the local time.

The Photo Tips section of National Parks is very cool. The Yosemite guide includes 5 photos with the photographer of each photo giving information about the shot, including GPS coordinates, time of day, camera details (camera, ISO, focal length, shutter speed, aperture), and difficulty. Following this information is the photographer’s write-up about the overview of the setup and a list of bullet points for getting the shot. It’s extremely helpful and I suddenly have a huge urge to go to Yosemite to take photos.

The Parks Secrets section is simply a list of random fact about the national park. For example, one of the nine secrets for Yosemite is that the giant sequoia trees can live to be more than 3,000 years old.

The What To See section is a basically the same photos in the initial gallery presented as a list and location’s name. Tapping the photo will, again, open it up on a black background and include a button that lets you see it on a map.

In the What To Do section of National Parks, you’ll find a list of common hikes and places to visit in the park. Tapping one will provide a nice write-up of why it is something you should do.

The parks included in National Parks are Acadia, Arches, Bryce Canyon, Death Valley, Everglades, Glacier, Grand Canyon, Grand Teton, Great Smoky Mountains, Haleakala, Hawai’i Volcanoes, Joshua Tree, Mount Rainier, Olympic, Rocky Mountain, Sequoia and Kings Canyon, Shenanadoah, Yellowstone, Yosemite, and Zion.

The Good

  • Gorgeous UI
  • Stunning photography
  • Photo tips are awesome
  • One free guide, each additional guide only $0.99 or $1.99
  • Add attractions to your itinerary
  • Works offline

The Bad

  • Photo gallery and What To See sections are basically the exact same thing, just presented differently

The Conclusion

National Parks by National Geographic is a must-have app for anyone planning to visit any of the park included in the app. The guides will help you plan your trip and makes sure you don’t miss any of the must-see and must-do attractions.

Free – Download Now



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gen 17

Updated. Outdoor recreational startup AllTrails recently raised a $1 million in funding according to an SEC filing, and has announced a major partnership with National Geographic that will bring unique, co-branded content to the startup’s website at AllTrails.com and its mobile applications.

Positioned as a Yelp for the outdoors, AllTrails highlights all the best spots for hiking, biking, camping, climbing and other outdoor activities throughout the U.S. It’s already built out its own platform for user-submitted reviews of various locations, and now is looking to extend that to potential partners. And with $1 million in new funding in hand, the startup is poised to expand pretty aggressively.

National Geographic is the first partner to take advantage of the platform, with a wide-ranging partnership that will co-brand the AllTrails site. As part of the partnership, NatGeo is also shutting down its Topo.com site and will be redirecting all of its traffic to AllTrails instead. AllTrails will also be getting a whole lot of exclusive topographic maps and other assets that AllTrails otherwise wouldn’t have access to.

According to AllTrails CEO Russell Cook, National Geographic was looking to roll out a similar guide for its readers, so it made sense to partner rather than to build out a new platform of their own. And with the introduction of new NatGeo data, AllTrails will be able to soon launch a premium subscription service with advanced features that will become available as part of the partnership.

AllTrails was launched about two years ago, and participated in the AngelPad startup incubator in the late summer of 2010. In addition to its website, AllTrails has developed mobile apps for the iPhone and Android platforms.

Update: The SEC filing referenced in this article does not reflect new funding, according to CEO Russell Cook, but represents a transfer of convertible debt into equity.

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