New Media
08.04.10
10 Essential iPad Apps for Publication Designers
The Guardian Eyewitness
Cost: free
Why you should get this app: a signature print feature adapted to the tablet -- and made better in the process
If you like photographic slideshows, check out NY Post Pix (free).
This app is just about as simple as can be: one captioned photo a day. But when the photographs (from The Guardian's team, as well as other news agencies) are this good, additional features would only detract from the power of the images. In adapting a printed feature -- the daily double-page spread dedicated to a single photo -- the app's creators only added a few, largely invisible tools: a 100-day photographic archive, slideshow mode, sharing, and "pro tips" describing the technical details behind each shot. The Guardian team made another smart decision by enticing Canon to sponsor the app for the cost of a logo. This way, the app stays free while making money for its creators.
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The New Zealand Herald
Cost: free
Why you should get this app: innovative combination of a slideshow and news reader using assets the newspaper already has
If you like newspaper apps (but want smaller photos), check out the Financial Times iPad Edition (free for ten articles per month).
The Kiwis know how to start off the app experience with a bang. Photographs of historical New Zealand events zoom past in the slick intro movie, which is occasionally preceded by an equally well-executed Mercedes ad. The article pages, though, are the true highlights here. Tapping an article in landscape mode brings up a full-screen photo with headline overlaid at the bottom. You can swipe up to reveal the article text, which intelligently uses the exact same headline as the photo, or you can swipe to the side for a full-screen slideshow view of the news. Nearly two apps in one, The New Zealand Herald reminds us that readers appreciate being able to interact with an app in different ways, as long as those interactions are distinct and appealing.
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Paris Match
Cost: free for the app, $1.99 per issue
Why you should get this app: perhaps the most interactive magazine out there
If you like interactive magazines, check out Fortune Magazine ($4.99 per issue).
Paris Match is a notable addition to the group of apps that add interactivity to the print edition of a magazine. Although less polished than Wired or Time, the iPad version of the French lifestyle weekly takes excellent advantage of the new medium. Nearly every story has an interactive feature, from hidden sidebars and audio interviews to zoomable slideshows and movie trailers. I particularly like the "match document," in which the full-screen background images cycle constantly.
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Reuters News Pro for iPad
Cost: free
Why you should get this app: a gorgeous interface that's a breath of fresh air
If you like wire services, check out AP News (free).
Reuters News Pro may feature the cleanest presentation to be found on a tablet. The gridded bar interface and mostly elegant typography make it a breeze to swipe through the headlines of your favorite section. (It would be nice, however, if you could navigate through articles themselves by swiping in the same manner.) The article pages may be nothing special, but the currency converter, market listings, and stock trends are highly usable.
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NPR for iPad
Cost: free
Why you should get this app: an audio playlist makes for an unusually engaging experience
If you like news on the radio, check out BBC News (free; tap "LIVE RADIO" at the top left).
As the designers discuss in a Society for News Design interview, National Public Radio's iPad app focuses on three topics of equal importance: news, arts & life, and music. While every story has a transcript or text, the star, naturally, is the audio. The key feature that makes it all work is the playlist, which keeps track of what you've listened to and what you want to hear next. An improvement over listening in the car, with the app you can easily view accompanying images and share interesting stories. And with a long list of available programs and stations, this is one app you're unlikely to explore fully the first time round. Best of all, if you quit the app while listening to an audio story, next time you come back a message will ask you if you want to resume where you left off.

Getty Images
Cost: free (only fully accessible with a Getty Images subscription)
Why you should get this app: an elegant way to search for and select stock photos
If you like big photos, check out Reuters Galleries (free).
Getty Images, the popular stock photo agency, may work even better on the iPad than online. The app's initial view is fun, a shifting gallery of editorial, creative, or archival photos. A nearly hidden "Easter egg": shake the iPad to bring up images for a random keyword -- good for when the creative juices aren't flowing. The photo search is phenomenal, making it easy to search for keywords and build a custom lightbox from your favorite results. (Lacking a Getty Images account, though, I wasn't able to try the billed features of sharing lightboxes, viewing them in slideshow mode, and adding voice recordings.) Complex searches work better on gettyimages.com, but the ability to compare up to four photos full screen makes picking the perfect shot a treat. Once again, the iPad's bright screen proves to be superb for displaying vibrant photography.
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Getty Images
Cost: free (only fully accessible with a Getty Images subscription)
Why you should get this app: an elegant way to search for and select stock photos
If you like big photos, check out Reuters Galleries (free).
Getty Images, the popular stock photo agency, may work even better on the iPad than online. The app's initial view is fun, a shifting gallery of editorial, creative, or archival photos. A nearly hidden "Easter egg": shake the iPad to bring up images for a random keyword -- good for when the creative juices aren't flowing. The photo search is phenomenal, making it easy to search for keywords and build a custom lightbox from your favorite results. (Lacking a Getty Images account, though, I wasn't able to try the billed features of sharing lightboxes, viewing them in slideshow mode, and adding voice recordings.) Complex searches work better on gettyimages.com, but the ability to compare up to four photos full screen makes picking the perfect shot a treat. Once again, the iPad's bright screen proves to be superb for displaying vibrant photography.
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Sympatico.ca
Cost: free
Why you should get this app: a modern, edgy vibe perfectly suited to the content
If you like modular interfaces, check out EW's Must List (free).
Most Americans can't name the Canadian prime minister, so I'm not surprised that I've never heard of Sympatico.ca, "Canada's leading information portal." But the app, with a decided slant toward celebrity, fashion, and music news, is interesting even to a Yankee like me. If you've been going straight through this post, you'll now be familiar with the gridded interface. But Sympatico.ca gives it an edge, with headlines overlaid on the photos that switch every few seconds. Like Reuters News Pro, it is fun to flip through each box until you find a story worth reading. The light tone of the content (be sure to check out some celebrity interviews from "The Hook") resonates in the option to "Accept Fate" upon reading your horoscope and the photos that flip when you tap them. You may not have heard of Sympatico.ca until now, but it's definitely worth your attention on the iPad.

Flipboard
Cost: free
Why you should get this app: shows that Twitter and news feeds don't have to look drab
If you like Twitter, check out Twitterific (free for ad-supported version).
You may have heard about this app last week. Tweeters and bloggers went wild for the idea of a better interface for your news and social media. There have been a few previous attempts on the iPad to make Twitter or news feeds into more of a newspaper, but none executed so well. The key innovation is that Flipboard pulls text and images from links, making your Twitter feed, for example, far more interesting than usual. As for content, the app's creators took a hybrid approach, providing some custom feeds (e.g., "FlipDesign," "FlipTech"), getting feeds from fun websites like Wired.com and TED Talks, and letting you add your own person or list from Twitter. It's not perfect, but this app has already made it to the first screen on my iPad.

The Elements: A Visual Exploration
Cost: $13.99
Why you should get this app: technically-advanced photography makes the book more useful and enjoyable
If you like interactive books, check out Alice for the iPad (lite version free; full version $8.99).
Moving further away from magazines and newspapers, The Elements puts the iBooks app and your Kindle to shame. Tapping an element in the periodic table brings up its characteristics and historical use (with even more available through Wolfram Alpha), but the images are what captivate. Each item has been photographed in 360 degrees to make them spin round at a touch. At first, this is just (very) entertaining. But as you work your way through the elements, being able to rotate the many glasses, metals, and crystals lends them a tactility that would be otherwise unavailable. Also, don't miss the illustrated version of Tom Lehrer's "The Elements" song, available in the main menu. "There's antimony, arsenic, aluminum, selenium...."

Marvel Comics
Cost: free ($1.99 for most comics)
Why you should get this app: an efficient store yields eminently readable comics
If you like Batman, check out DC Comics (free, $0.99 to $1.99 for most comics).
When I was younger I enjoyed reading comics, but I haven't bought a new issue in years. It is a tribute to the simple effectiveness of the Marvel Comics app that I have now begun reading several new series. You can browse comics about the X-Men, Spider-Man, Captain America, and many more by release date and popularity. If you're a superhero nerd, you can even search for your favorite author or artist. Once you've bought an issue, you can read a page in portrait mode at slightly less than actual size, or double-tap to navigate panel by panel. The colors in the heroes' spandex really pop off the iPad's screen! At $1.99, these comics are cheap enough for an impulse purchase, so don't say I didn't warn you if you spend a small fortune.
P.S. For more thoughts on designing for the tablet, check out the liveblog I co-wrote at the Poynter Institute's "Power of the Tablet" conference.
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Cost: free
Why you should get this app: shows that Twitter and news feeds don't have to look drab
If you like Twitter, check out Twitterific (free for ad-supported version).
You may have heard about this app last week. Tweeters and bloggers went wild for the idea of a better interface for your news and social media. There have been a few previous attempts on the iPad to make Twitter or news feeds into more of a newspaper, but none executed so well. The key innovation is that Flipboard pulls text and images from links, making your Twitter feed, for example, far more interesting than usual. As for content, the app's creators took a hybrid approach, providing some custom feeds (e.g., "FlipDesign," "FlipTech"), getting feeds from fun websites like Wired.com and TED Talks, and letting you add your own person or list from Twitter. It's not perfect, but this app has already made it to the first screen on my iPad.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The Elements: A Visual Exploration
Cost: $13.99
Why you should get this app: technically-advanced photography makes the book more useful and enjoyable
If you like interactive books, check out Alice for the iPad (lite version free; full version $8.99).
Moving further away from magazines and newspapers, The Elements puts the iBooks app and your Kindle to shame. Tapping an element in the periodic table brings up its characteristics and historical use (with even more available through Wolfram Alpha), but the images are what captivate. Each item has been photographed in 360 degrees to make them spin round at a touch. At first, this is just (very) entertaining. But as you work your way through the elements, being able to rotate the many glasses, metals, and crystals lends them a tactility that would be otherwise unavailable. Also, don't miss the illustrated version of Tom Lehrer's "The Elements" song, available in the main menu. "There's antimony, arsenic, aluminum, selenium...."
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Marvel Comics
Cost: free ($1.99 for most comics)
Why you should get this app: an efficient store yields eminently readable comics
If you like Batman, check out DC Comics (free, $0.99 to $1.99 for most comics).
When I was younger I enjoyed reading comics, but I haven't bought a new issue in years. It is a tribute to the simple effectiveness of the Marvel Comics app that I have now begun reading several new series. You can browse comics about the X-Men, Spider-Man, Captain America, and many more by release date and popularity. If you're a superhero nerd, you can even search for your favorite author or artist. Once you've bought an issue, you can read a page in portrait mode at slightly less than actual size, or double-tap to navigate panel by panel. The colors in the heroes' spandex really pop off the iPad's screen! At $1.99, these comics are cheap enough for an impulse purchase, so don't say I didn't warn you if you spend a small fortune.
P.S. For more thoughts on designing for the tablet, check out the liveblog I co-wrote at the Poynter Institute's "Power of the Tablet" conference.
Related Links:
Wired CD Scott Dadich is now Condé Nast's new Executive Director, Digital Magazine Development

I read The New York Times will launch Press Engine in the fourth quarter of 2010. Press Engine is a technology and design solution that allows publishers and media organizations to deliver their content across new platforms starting with iPhone and iPad applications.
(aka template).
Apparently the business model will be designed so that publishers control and own any advertising and subscription revenue on their applications. (Funny because the subscription model for SI way rejected by Apple a couple days ago) Clients will pay a one-time license fee and monthly maintenance; they will also have the ability to opt in to future upgrades.
Given the numerous postings about magazine templates last week I thought this might be relevant to the discussion.
iPad templates will probably become more in vogue very soon. A "plug and chug" operation that works similar to Zino or Issuu but is optimized to perform with a higher level of interaction better fitting the iPad and iPhone.
In fact my team has this exact model in place now called "Folio" which uses Apple's SDK and a web-based management tool to deliver content to the iPad for several companies. Bottom line: Every publication large or small must leverage existing content for tablet reading.
Flipboard is a MUST DOWNLOAD for the iPad. Its an amazing aggregator of content with great social media integration. This is the app to look at when a print pub is ready to forgo re-formatting print pages (Wired, TIME, SI, etc) and adopt re-imagining magazines (Gourmet Live)
Josh is right Flipboard is a great app! (I finally was able to sync my FB account) Flipboard was founded by Mike McCue, former CEO of Tellme and Evan Doll, a former senior iPhone engineer at Apple. So needless to say the technical expertise that went behind this app is first-rate.
For months now I have resisted buying an iPad as I'm waiting for the inevitable better / cheaper second version to be released.
(I'm not totally sure why as I have historically been an Apple early adopter, I think I'm trying to prove to myself I have some form of willpower left in me!)
I have to say this is the coolest roundup I have seen, it's making my mouth water to the point that I may have to grab one on my way home!
Damn you SPD!
Great post, the new zealand herald app is great! Speaking of apps from the southern hemisphere, one I've been enjoying is "Sport & Style" from the sydney morning herald. It has a great use of 360 degree image rotation which the advertisers (particularly car manufacturers LOVE!). On the less glamorous side (but enormously useful side) for those developing an app which is limited to using only system fonts, there is good old "lorem ipsum". Its a free app which is a quick guide to how the limited number of type faces apple "approve" as their system fonts will look when rendered at the iPad's screen resolution (which is 132 dpi!). Super helpful!
About fonts: Talk to your developer. The good news is that mobile Safari (iPhone and iPad) allow for web fonts, the bad news is they only allow for "SVG" versions, which I hear are a large download. With these web fonts you can use any font you want. This should also apply to the app itself. Its early, but possible to have your print font family online, app and on mobile.
http://typekit.com/
http://opentype.info/blog/2010/04/13/the-ipad-and-svg-fonts-in-mobile-safari/
http://blog.typekit.com/2010/06/23/improvements-to-iphone-font-support-in-ios4/
The Marvel Comics app is the best thing that can happen for the survival of comics. Superhero TV shows and movies have almost made everyone forget that the stories originated with comics. The app is great for those who grew up reading the comics and want the nostalgia associated with reading them again. It also provides a way for those who didn't grow up with comic books to know what it was like in the Golden Age of superheroes.
Thanks for this cool list. Like others, I have considered buying an iPad from Apple, but always thought it was overkill. Now it may be a boom for my productivity
BTW, What do you think of other ebooks like ones from Sony? http://www.sony.com
Apple's editorial team weighs in with their collection of "Apps for Designers"...
http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewRoom?fcId=384922938&mt=8&id=25204
Rupert Murdoch's The Daily was released today and is definitely worth checking out (after the 20 minute download).
Another gem I found, Design Scene. This app has real-time visual inspiration from 50+ sites and a text feed from 30+ sites. Perfect for a snowy day...