After Time Inc. and Hearst, the Daily Telegraph has become the latest news publisher to sign up to Apple's terms on digital subscriptions with its new iPad app. The Guardian reported that the app is free to download but charges readers £1.19 for a single edition, or £9.99 for a monthly subscription. Telegraph newspaper subscribers get full access to its iPad edition for free.
Which papers have the best chance of being around in ten years? Business Insider listed its picks.
The Guardian is 190 years old. Born on 5 May 1821 as the Manchester Guardian, the paper celebrates its long life during which it has essentially changed neither its ownership nor its character, it declared.
As Press Gazette reported yesterday, The Independent has given away 200,000 copies of the paper today, May 5th, as it publishes a 32-page supplement about the voting reform referendum. Editor-in-chief Simon Kelner said: "The Independent believes very strongly that the democratic health of a country depends on engagement of voters. By putting 200,000 free copies of The Independent into people's hands ahead of this crucial AV vote, we are providing readers with all the information they need to make an informed choice at the polls."
For its series "Media Diet", the Atlantic Wire reported what Adam Moss, editor-in-chief of New York Magazine, like to read.


