Showing posts with label HTML. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HTML. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Responsive websites: Boston papers show what’s next for media sites


The Berkeley Beacon, Emerson College’s independent student newspaper, is ahead of most professional media; its new HTML5 website is responsive, Nieman Journalism Lab reported today.


The site is now completely mobile device friendly, the paper’s editors announced.


A responsive Web design addresses the problem of constantly changing devices on which to view websites. “Instead of responding to today’s needs for a desktop Web version adapted to the most common screen resolution, along with a particular mobile version (often specific to a single mobile device), the idea is to approach the issue the other way around: use flexible and fluid layouts that adapt to almost any screen,” MSDN Magazine explained.


The Boston Globe unveiled its new premium content mobile initiative in December last year, Read Write Web noted, calling it “a win in the fight against mobile device fragmentation and screen sizes and the future of how content is displayed on mobile devices.”


Emerson College is located in Boston as well, and “it’s no coincidence the Beacon site looks a lot like BostonGlobe.com,” according to Nieman.


Alexander C. Kaufman, the paper’s editor-in-chief, and coder/designer Ryan Catalani studied the Globe’s new design carefully.


The new website doesn’t contain advertising yet, but it will when traffic levels reach a more steady pace, Kaufman told Nieman. And when it does, the goal is for the Beacon to look “closer to BostonGlobe.com than Boston.com.” This means looking more like a print newspaper, with fewer ads.


To create its new site last year, the Boston Globe hired design and development firm the Filament Group, according to Read Write Web, which sat down with the group’s partners for a helpful Q&A on how the new design was constructed for all devices.


Images: Screenshot and ReadWriteWeb

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Economist launches tablet-only HTML election app

The Economist has released a new HTML app for tablets, this time about the 2012 U.S. election.

The free Electionism app will include the publication’s content as well as that of D.C. sister publication Roll Call, AdWeek reported today. The Economist famously pulled its app from iTunes in 2011 when it didn’t agree with Apples policies and created its own HTML app instead.

Electionism will also give a space for journalists to share links to what they are reading; a “Latest from Twitter” section that will aggregate noteworthy tweets from candidates, pundits, publications and other sources.

Pressley and the Media Lab, an internal team creating innovative products for The Economist Group titles, created the new app, according to TechCrunch. Because the app is for tablets only, it alerts users of that fact if they try to visit the site from a non-tablet web browser, and then directs them to The Economist’s website.

In November, The Economist announced that more than a million readers access its content via a mobile device monthly, and more than three million of its iOS and Android apps have been downloaded.