Tuesday, 10 April 2012

Weekly Wrap-up: Users Don't Like Your Site

weekly_wrapup-1.pngDoes the rise of the read-later apps mean that users don't want the experience of using your site at all? Jon Mitchell explores that question in this week's top story, Websites Have to Get Better. All of this and more in the ReadWriteWeb Weekly Wrap-up.

After the jump you'll find more of this week's top news stories on some of the key topics that are shaping the Web - Location, App Stores and Real-Time Web - plus highlights from some of our six channels. Read on for more.

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Websites Have to Get Better

Websites Have to Get Better

When you take content written by someone else, strip it of its chosen monetization methods, and present it back to readers without the publisher's permission, that publisher is not going to be happy. Unfortunately for publishers, that's exactly what many of the read-later apps are doing. But is this because readers want to be able to read offline, or is it because they simply don't like using our sites? Read Jon Mitchell's take on this issue in Websites Have to Get Better.

From our readers:

Jaap Willem Online Marketeer and Photographer -- That's true.
The reading experience is very important indeed, but so is the time shifted reading and the different device when you read the content.

The big break through for Instapaper was with the iPhone and I think it�s still their main scanning (in your words scraping/parsing) device while the iPad is the main reading device.

I don�t have the exact numbers for this but when I hear Marco Arment speaking, I have this idea.

Furthermore I do hope indeed that the websites will continue to improve and that in general the reading experience will be improving every time

Keep up the good work here at RWW :)

More Top Posts:

The Nokia Lumia 900 Could Be Today's Best Smartphone, But...

The Nokia Lumia 900 Could Be Today's Best Smartphone, But...

When it hits AT&T stores next week, the Nokia Lumia 900 could be the best smartphone on the market. If Apple released a piece of hardware as sleek and beautiful as the Lumia 900, the world would bow at its feet and marvel at Cupertino's latest masterpiece. But that is not going to happen with the Lumia 900. More

5 Ways to Keep Your Google Browsing Private

5 Ways to Keep Your Google Browsing Private

Google's one unified privacy policy went into effect on March 1. We spoke with two security experts, Security Evangelist Stephen Cobb of security solutions provider ESET, and Alisdair Faulkner, chief products officer of cybercrime defender platform ThreatMatrix, to get a better idea of what you can do to keep your browsing history as private as possible. More

New iPhone, iPad and Android Apps for March 2012

New iPhone, iPad and Android Apps for March 2012

It has been a great month for apps. Both iOS and Android had big markers in March, as Apple released the new iPad and Google rebranded the Android Market as Google Play. Developers have been hard at work creating apps for each platform and some great games, social apps and utilities have been recently released. Whether you are looking to draw on your iPad, make VoIP calls with your Android or just learn a new language, the ReadWriteWeb Apps of the Month for March has a little something for everybody. More

Eye Movement Study Reveals Six Must-Know Things About Facebook Brand Pages

Eye Movement Study Reveals Six Must-Know Things About Facebook Brand Pages

The Facebook Timeline that brand pages were forced to switch over to last week is "flawed," according to an eye movement study of six brand pages by SimpleUsability, with many of the new features going unnoticed or being misunderstood. More

Windows 8: The OS/2 of Today

Windows 8: The OS/2 of Today

After watching Microsoft lurch toward completion of Windows 8 and trying out a few of its early versions, I am struck by a tremendous sense of d�j� vu. It took me some time to figure out why I was feeling this way, and then it hit me: Win 8 is on track to become the OS/2 of today, and suffer a similar and ignominious fate. More

The Future of Photo-Sharing Apps

The Future of Photo-Sharing Apps

The tiny Instagram app grew to a gigantic 27 million users during its first year in the App Store. It has inspired real-life Instameet-ups, Instagram art shows and a community based on love for the image, where users can post and receive feedback from other visual thinkers. Instagrams are not only the new Polaroids when it comes to party pics, they've become a way for users to communicate visually, sharing inspiration and ideas (well, iPhone users anyway - the Android app is due out soon). More

The Future of Newspapers May End Up Looking a Lot Like... Newspapers

The Future of Newspapers May End Up Looking a Lot Like... Newspapers

It's a bit of a role reversal at the college newspaper where I am the faculty adviser: I, playing the role of old ink-stained curmudgeon, keep insisting the students need to think about improving their website and developing multimedia reporting skills, while they insist they love putting out a dead-tree product each week. More

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