iPad&iPhone user

Apple enters world of publishing with Apple News+

Whether it’s live magazine covers or cost savings, Apple News+ offers advantages over normal subscripti­ons. Leif Johnson reports

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The focus of Apple’s Show Time event may have been TV entertainm­ent services, but the company made a big splash right out of the gate with the announceme­nt of Apple News+. As the name implies, it’s a premium version of Apple News that offers more content than you’ll get with the free app – all with a focus on magazines.

Specifical­ly, for $9.99 a month (£tbc), you and your family get access to more than 300 magazines and other publicatio­ns ranging from NationalGe­ographic to Wired to TheWallStr­eetJournal. We’ll dig deeper once we’ve spent time with Apple News+, but for now, here’s what intrigues us the most.

Apple News+ can potentiall­y save you money

I’m one of the people who will likely see a real benefit from using Apple News+ as I pay for subscripti­ons to

TheNewYork­er, Wired, and NationalGe­ographic – all of which are included with the new service. If the app works the way I think it will, that means I’ll be able to dump my subscripti­ons in favour of Apple’s far more palatable all-you-can-eat fee. Indeed, Apple says that if you bought subscripti­ons to all of the magazines included in Apple News+, you’ll be saving around $8,000 per year.

At the moment, however, it’s not clear if an Apple News+ subscripti­on will allow me to access paywalled content to, say, TheNewYork­er when I access the site through a link on Twitter. That’s mostly how I read articles, and I’m not convinced Apple News+ would be a good deal if I always have to access paywalled content through the app.

It captures the magazine experience in digital form

One of the best reasons to buy a physical magazine is that print usually offers a richer visual experience than what you’ll get online. Fascinatin­g layouts, great photograph­y, unforgetta­ble graphic design – it’s all

there. And with Apple News+ you’ll get something like that experience in the app. And at times it might be even better.

In the case of NationalGe­ographic, Apple showed off a ‘live cover’ of a recent issue featuring Sydney, Australia. Instead of the static photo of the skyline that you’d get with the physical edition, Apple News+ treats you to a video image of the city as it rolls underneath you – as though you’re in a helicopter. Elsewhere, Apple showed off wonderful article layouts, many of which looked especially good on the iPad Pro.

But just how common will these eye-popping visual will be? They look stunning, but they also look like a lot of work on the design end. And during a time when

publicatio­ns are cutting staff, it’s difficult to imagine live covers will become the News+ standard.

Apple News+ encourages content exploratio­n

It looks as though you’ll be able to access a single magazine’s content all at once, much as you would if you had a physical copy. But much like we already see with the existing Apple News app, the main interface of Apple News+ pulls from multiple publicatio­ns so it can offer recommenda­tions based on your interests and trending stories. It’s basically a pretty RSS feed. So even though I normally wouldn’t look at TheWall

StreetJour­nal on a regular basis, Apple News+ would recommend articles to me if their coverage on, say, Apple TV was of interest to me.

Magazines can be downloaded for offline reading

Another great benefit of traditiona­l magazines is that you can curl up with them away from the Internet and get lost in their stories. Apple captures a little of that experience by allowing you to download entire magazines for offline reading with an AppleNews+ experience. This will be especially great if need some reading material on a long flight.

It supports family sharing

If you want everyone in your family to be able to use Apple News+, you’ll only need to pay for one subscripti­on and then everyone else can access it through Family Sharing. It’s a simple feature, but a

welcome one. It’s a little like passing around the latest issue of a magazine once you’re done reading it.

The first month is free

Much as with Apple Music, you can try out Apple News+ for one month for free. I’d certainly be taking advantage of this offer, as I subscribe to a lot of the magazines that Apple includes in the package.

Just be sure to unsubscrib­e once the first month is up so Apple doesn’t keep charging you. This used to be a minor hassle, but fortunatel­y Apple has simplified the process in recent months.

Availabili­ty

Many of the other services Apple announced won’t even be available until autumn, but Apple News+ is live in the US and Canada now. For the rest of us, we’ll have to wait until later this year.

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