San Francisco Chronicle

Flipboard not just for mobile use anymore

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Smartphone­s and tablets have been pushing the personal computer aside, thanks in part to popular apps made by mobile-first entreprene­urs like Flipboard CEO Mike McCue.

Just don’t tell McCue the desktop is dead.

In fact, the PC remains the mode of choice for many readers, especially during business hours. McCue is catering to that preference with last week’s introducti­on of a Web browser version of Flipboard’s digital magazine service. Until now, Flipboard’s 15 million magazines could only be read through a mobile app.

“There is a whole group of people who don’t do that much browsing on their phones. That’s what they use their computer for,” McCue said during an interview at Flipboard’s Palo Alto headquarte­rs.

Besides winning new converts with the expanded access, McCue is also hoping many of Flipboard’s 50 million existing users will visit the service more frequently now that it’s on PCs.

PC sales have been slumping for the past two years, though there have been recent signs the worst of the decline is over. Meanwhile, sales of mobile devices are still growing despite a recent slowdown in the tablet market. Worldwide PC shipments declined 2 percent last year to about 309 million machines while smartphone sales climbed 28 percent to 1.3 billion devices and tablet sales increased 4 percent to 230 million, according to the research firm Internatio­nal Data Corp.

All but a few of the magazines in Flipboard are free. They are created through links culled from users’ social media accounts or put together by other Flipboard users interested in sharing their interests and expertise with other readers, as well as profession­al publishers trying to expand their digital audiences. Flipboard lists the magazines under 34,000 topics.

Flipboard was originally designed for tablets, but smartphone­s now account for about 70 percent of user activity, McCue said. That figure seems likely to change now that it’s been tailored for the desktop. PCs remain the most popular way to access Internet services during the weekdays when most people are at work, with smartphone­s running second, according to data from comScore Inc. It isn’t until the evening when tablets become the leading Internet-connected device, with peak use occurring between 8 and 9 p.m.

Flipboard isn’t the only popular mobile app making the leap to the PC in search of new users and deeper engagement. Last month, Facebook’s mobile messaging service WhatsApp offered a version for Web browsers, although a user’s smartphone must be on and online for the syncing to work. The trend reflects a growing realizatio­n among mobile-focused apps that they can’t ignore PCs if they want to connect with users as much as possible, said Forrester Research analyst Frank Gillett. “It doesn’t make sense to users if they up show up to a service on a PC and get ignored, but get all this magic if you show up on a mobile device.”

Flipboard’s Web browser version, built over the past 18 months, is designed to detect and automatica­lly adjust to the different screen sizes of PCs. The largest canvas of PC screens allows Flipboard to rearrange the way the content appears on desktops so compelling pictures are showcased in bigger sizes and different layouts than on a smartphone, or even a tablet. For now, the magazine pages on Flipboard’s PC version are scrolled through with a mouse instead of flipped through with a touch as on the mobile apps.

Coming to the PC fulfills McCue’s original vision for Flipboard when he came up with the idea in 2009 shortly after leaving Tellme, a voice-recognitio­n service that he started and eventually sold to Microsoft for $800 million. After concluding that Web browsers and chips at that time were too clunky to produce digital magazines that looked as snazzy as print editions, McCue and Flipboard co-founder Evan Doll turned their attention to the iPad before moving on to smartphone­s.

“Our users sitting in front of their PCs can finally stop wondering why they can’t use Flipboard,” McCue said.

 ?? Eric Risberg / Associated Press ?? Flipboard founder and CEO Mike McCue tries out the service on a desktop computer at the company’s headquarte­rs in Palo Alto.
Eric Risberg / Associated Press Flipboard founder and CEO Mike McCue tries out the service on a desktop computer at the company’s headquarte­rs in Palo Alto.

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