Boston Herald

Apple buys Texture, a digital mag distributo­r

- TECHNOLOGY

SAN FRANCISCO — Apple has bought digital magazine distributo­r Texture to extend its subscripti­on services beyond music and online storage.

The deal announced yesterday puts Apple in control of a service often described as a Netflix of magazines. Texture allows readers to pore over articles in more than 200 magazines for $10 per month, much like Netflix sells unlimited access to its video programmin­g.

But Texture hasn’t proven as popular as Netflix, which boasts 55 million subscriber­s in the U.S. alone. Texture hasn’t specified how many subscriber­s it has, but CEO John Loughlin said in a 2016 interview that the number ranged in the “hundreds of thousands.”

Apple didn’t disclose how much it paid for Texture, which had raised at least $90 million since it was founded nearly a decade ago as Next Issue. The magazine distributo­r had been owned by investors that included Condé Nast, Hearst, Meredith, Rogers Media and KKR.

“We are committed to quality journalism from trusted sources and allowing magazines to keep producing beautifull­y designed and engaging stories for users,” said Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of internet software and services.

Unlike most Apple products, Texture will be available on devices powered by Google’s Android software in addition to the iPhone and iPad. Texture will join a stable of Apple subscripti­on options that are anchored by the company’s musicscrea­ming service, which has 36 million subscriber­s.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? ‘COMMITTED TO QUALITY JOURNALISM’: Apple has bought digital magazine service Texture. At right, an Apple Store in Chicago is shown last fall.
AP FILE PHOTO ‘COMMITTED TO QUALITY JOURNALISM’: Apple has bought digital magazine service Texture. At right, an Apple Store in Chicago is shown last fall.

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