Gizmodo Review of New Wired IPad Edition
Posted on May 26, 2010 by Mediabids
By John Herrman
I'm Still Waiting
for a Great iPad Magazine
With the new Wired app, Conde Nast has built,
unequivocally, the best magazine for the iPad. And yet I find myself asking, is
this it? And will it cost this much?
I love Wired. I love magazines. But with the
launch of the
magazine app, Wired's much-previewed, profoundly hyped and unexpectedly
controversial claim on the future of the magazine, the uneasiness, and the pit
in my stomach that I felt during the first wave of iPad magazines—dominated by PopSci's ambitious
re-imagining of the title, but comprised mostly of blatant halfassery—has only
grown deeper.
Consider the facts:
• Wired's
app is $5. I could buy a subscription to the magazine, for a
year, for around $10. A year of Wired purchased from the App Store would cost
$60. Conde is apparently working on a unified pricing scheme across print and
digital for the New Yorker, so maybe it'll filter over to Wired? Who knows. I
know it must have cost a ton to develop this thing, but readers don't care
about that: They care about the words. These words cost too much. (Also, it's
not like this magazine doesn't have ads. It's got a fucking ton of ads.)
• It's
over 500MB. Don't get me wrong, the graphics are lovely, and
the videos look great. But in the time it took me to download and install this
app on my iPad, I was able to walk to a bodega, take out cash at an ATM, get a
cup of coffee, come home, and send a few emails. Hell, I could have picked up a
copy of Wired while I was out; I spotted a few copies in a stand next to the
counter. (Last month's issue, but still.)
• It's
still quite obviously a magazine. It may seem like a fine
distinction, but with this app Wired hasn't reinvented the magazine, they've
just reinvented Wired. Wired's graphic design is legendary, and I'd hate to see
it sacrificed for the iPad app. But some of these magazine conventions don't
really work—in this app, I never feel like I've truly tucked into an article,
as I do with the print edition, or even an Instapaper bookmark. PopSci had this
problem, too, and it's worrying that none of the mag world's stars have figured
out what to do with it. (Interestingly, the best handling of long-form writing
I've seen in an iPad app came from Vanity Fair, which is published by the same
company as Wired.)
• The
little things! For example, you can't copy and paste, or share
an article. (Some of this is coming in the future, apparently.)
And then, well, there's the experience, the
look, the feel—there's the app
itself. We saw the demos before launch, in Wired Reader, and we gushed.
Rightfully! Even watching them now, I'm impressed. But in my hand, it's...
emotionally underwhelming? Visually overwhelming? I don't know. It doesn't
really click—the layout and design are to my eye impeccable, and the
interactive infographics are objectively impressive, but I find myself wishing
for a web page, some flat text, or something.

But man, those early demos! Magazines were going to be interactive, y'know?
There was much talk of the future, of revolution. And following the buzz, there
was execution. This is
that app, minus about, dunno, 15 experiential percent?
The video, the diagrams, the
interactivity—it's all here, but in my hands, it doesn't capture the magic it
had before, on that video, and more importantly, in our eager imaginations.
Wired didn't break their promise; we just bought too far into it.
Wired's app is a broad step toward the ideal
of an interactive app. Sure, it's a pain to swipe through all those ads—I don't
know why digital mags should adhere to the same ad conventions as paper
ones—and there's still a lot of tuning to be done, but I guess I see what
they're going for, vaguely. It's attractive and flashy, impressive, but
expensive. It's aspirational.
The alternative ideal for digital magazines
is a stripped-back approach—either scanned PDFs, or near-bare OCR scans of the
current issues, more or less like web content. These cost very little to make,
so—and this is why I call it an ideal—publishers could give readers their
entire archives, on tap, for almost nothing. But that's only attractive for a
certain category of readerly, word-heavy magazines, and again, it's unclear how
you'd sell that, either: Is it a bonus to the regular mag? A separate
subscription?
These aren't new questions—they're the same
ones that more cynical observers have been asking since the first eruptions of
iPad hype around the press. It's just that with Wired, the uber mag app, they
still haven't been answered. [Wired]
Tagged ipad app application revenue print ads magazine wired advertising
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