Apple iPad to Gain Time Subscriptions: Report
Time is planning to offer iPad users subscription services for its publications, beginning with Entertainment Weekly and People, according to Bloomberg. Starting in three months, Time will roll out a new pub each month.
Apple iPad users will soon have a few more reading options. According to Bloomberg, Time is planning to offer iPad
readers subscription services for its popular magazine titles.
"It'll probably be June before we're able to get it up and running for
subscriptions," Time CEO Ann S. Moore told
Bloomberg. "The iPad doesn't allow me to do that right now. It's only a
newsstand."
Time owns 21 magazine titles in the United
States, including Time, InStyle, People and
Real Simple, as well as international brands such as Fortune and Wallpaper.
Also under its umbrella are 25 U.S. Websites, including EW.com and
CNNMoney.com.
Beginning with Entertainment Weekly and People, Bloomberg reported April 9,
Time will begin adding one magazine title a month to the iPad app store. With a
commitment to purchase a certain number of issues, Moore
said, customers should expect a discount.
"We're thrilled with the iPad because it's really putting pressure on everybody
to get into a color world," Moore
told Bloomberg. "I couldn't convince Amazon to do it alone."
The Apple iPad went on sale April 3, and Apple
did swift business, selling 300,000 units that day-including preorders. By
April 8, that figure had jumped to 450,000.
Despite its success, the iPad is not without its flaws, primary among which is
its deliberate lack of Flash technology. New
York Times tech reviewer David
Pogue, in his review of the iPad, complained that "thousands of Websites
show up with empty white squares on the iPad-places where videos or animations
are supposed to play."
Apple CEO Steve Jobs has called Flash a "CPU
hog" and an old technology and has worked
to persuade organizations, such as the Wall Street Journal, to instead use
a different video compression standard.
The
Associated Press and publishing giant Conde Nast-which offers titles such
as The New Yorker, GQ, Vanity Fair, Wired and Glamour-have both committed to
creating iPad-friendly content.
Looking to acquire still more content for iPad customers, Jobs
is also said to be at work negotiating with networks to deliver television
shows to the iPad store, as well as with book publishers to bring
additional titles into its iBookstore.
While early estimates for iPad sales began at 1 million to 2 million units,
analysis firms have since upped their figures. On March 3, Broadpoint AmTech,
which originally estimated sales of 2.2 million units by year's end, raised its
guess to a conservative 4 million units.
"If the device lives up to its potential," Broadpoint AmTech analyst Brian
Marshall added, "actual
unit shipments could approach 7 million-plus units."









