Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Legacy Archives

Hearst Corp.’s Skiff to Release e-Reading Devices and Services in 2010

Add as a preferred source on Google

newsweek-ereaderIf you’re sick of hearing about e-Readers, then you might want to sit 2010 out. This coming year is going to be a “biggie” for the e-Reader market—more competition, more innovation and more daily tech updates on these literary devices. And it looks like today a new contender in the e-Reading game has stepped into the spotlight. Magazine and newspaper giant Hearst Corp. has been developing a digital content publishing and distribution service called Skiff for the past few years, and Hearst says this company will be ready to break onto the scene in 2010. The company reports that the Skiff service and digital store will feature a grand selection of newspapers, magazines, books and other content from multiple publishers, uniquely optimized for wireless delivery to devices and delivery via the Web.

Apparently Hearts Corp. has been trying to support and invest in new technologies for some time now, but nothing was much of a fit until—of course—the digital reader came out. How appropriate for a publisher to choose that type of tech. Skiff says it is working with major consumer electronics manufacturers to integrate Skiff’s service, digital store and specialized client software into a range of innovative devices. The company says it has signed a multi-year agreement with Sprint to provide 3G connectivity for Skiff’s dedicated e-reading devices in the United States and plans are underway to have Skiff readers available for purchase in more than 1,000 Sprint retail locations and online at sprint.com. Skiff promises better graphics and better layouts of digital content, butthat said, it’ll probably open up more windows for advertising and higher-priced content.

Recommended Videos

“Navigating new digital technologies is extremely challenging for publishers, which is why Skiff exists—it will give publishers a strong partner that can help them succeed in e-reading,” said Kenneth A. Bronfin, president of Hearst Interactive Media. “Skiff will offer publishers a way to participate across the full value chain, from shaping publication design to selling advertising to maintaining subscriber relationships, so that they can better control their destiny as e-reading expands.”

Dena Cassella
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Haole built. O'ahu grown
It seems the future of Vision Pro headset has been sealed at Apple
Apple Vision Pro

It's never easy watching a big swing miss. But this one? This one stings a little differently because Apple had every resource in the world to make it work, and it still couldn't.

According to MacRumors, Apple has quietly stepped back from the Vision Pro. Not discontinued it — the M5 model is still sitting on shelves at $3,499 — but the internal teams that built and maintained it have been scattered across other projects, and there are currently no plans for a next-generation model. For all practical purposes, the Vision Pro experiment is on ice, possibly permanently.

Read more
Every call you make is drawing a map of your city and it just might fix our traffic woes
Apple Maps Suggested Places screenshots.

You don’t actually need to share your location for your city to figure out where you are. Every call you make and every message you send, quietly connects to a nearby network antenna. Now multiply that across millions of people doing the same thing every day, and what you end up with isn’t just data — it’s a living, moving picture of how a city really works. That’s exactly what researchers at the University of Córdoba have managed to tap into with a new tool designed to interpret those patterns.

The tool that watches without really watching

Read more
KitKat has a special chocolate wrapper that cuts off your phone from the outside world
KitKat turned its iconic slogan into a signal-blocking chocolate wrapper!
kitkat-break-mode-wrapper-faraday-cage

You know that feeling when you really need a break, but your phone keeps buzzing anyway? KitKat heard you. The chocolate brand, in collaboration with creative agency Ogilvy Colombia, has unveiled something called Break Mode, a KitKat wrapper that doubles as a Faraday cage for your phone.

A Faraday cage, for the uninitiated, is a conductive enclosure that blocks electromagnetic signals. The technology has traditionally lived in medical labs and data security facilities. Now it lives in a red chocolate wrapper, which is honestly something nobody saw coming.

Read more