Snazzy new Digital Edition for The Guardian

The Guardian, Prince Edward Island’s newspaper of record, has traditionally had a web presence that’s lagged about 4 years behind current design and usability trends. This has improved a lot in recent months: they’ve got RSS feeds and Nigel Armstrong and user-generated content.

And now they’re about to release a snazzy new digital edition of the print paper.

Their last try at this involved installing software on your machine and was more “hobbled PDF” than “leveraging web technologies” (although still nice to have access to when you’re in Kathmandu).

The new version, branded Smart Edition, has much to recommend it:

The Guardian 
Smart Edition' screen shot

There’s no extra software to install — it’s a completely in-browser application. Among other nice features you’ll find:

  • Integrated RSS feeds — links in the RSS call up pages in the Smart Edition.
  • Text-to-Speech — get any story read to you (with a not-bad-sounding robot voice).
  • Photo Index — a clickable thumbnail index of all the images in the print edition.
  • Full-text search — searches everything, including the text of classified word-ads.
  • Alerts — email alerts for keywords (they call this “Monitors”).
  • Front Page by Email — you can sign up to receive the front page graphic by email as soon as it is published.
  • Offline Viewing — which does require installation of Windows-only application.
  • Mobile Edition — a mobile-optimized version of the paper is available (it works great on an iPod Touch).
  • Social Software Links — built in article links to Digg, del.icio.us, and built-in blog posting for Blogger, Wordpress and Livejournal.

Of course The Guardian didn’t built all this out themselves — they’re using NewspaperDirect technology. But kudos to them for realizing that it might be worthwhile to experiment with a modern feature-rich approach to web delivery.

The Smart Edition is currently in testing and isn’t being officially marketed yet (although you’ll find a “Today’s Smart Edition” link on the side in the left-hand sidebar under the weather).

Comments

DerekMac's picture
DerekMac on December 16, 2007 - 21:00 Permalink

I’ve been using it for a couple of weeks — it’s a vast improvement from its Zinio (PDF) predecessor — hotlinks everywhere, no need to download anymore, so you can access it anywhere you are. Reasonably fast. Problems to-date: they are still having delivery problems — yesterday’s arrived at 7:30 am, long after I usually finish reading it, and they are missing sections that used to be in the Zinio edition, including the all-important Real Estate and TV Guides. They assure me that both of these problems are temporary, and we will soon have a complete epaper delivered early in the morning.

Peter Rukavina's picture
Peter Rukavina on December 16, 2007 - 21:02 Permalink

I just noticed that all the phone numbers in the Smart Edition are clickable links to Skype calls.

DC's picture
DC on December 17, 2007 - 01:56 Permalink

Looks very interesting… any idea on the subscription cost? I didn’t go through the process to find out.

DerekMac's picture
DerekMac on December 17, 2007 - 11:55 Permalink

Subscription cost is same as paper edition — $15.20 plus GST per month off your credit card. If you want both, you can get the epaper for $10 extra.

Re the Skype links: they show up only if you have Skype installed. I noticed them on my one Skype machine, but not on another that doesn’t have it.