TES was named the fastest-growing digital edition this week in Press Gazette with sales up 17-fold year on year. It's left us feeling like proud parents!
Times Educational Supplement is UK's fastest growing digital edition
Topics: digital editions, News, apps, Blog, Client focus, design, digital design
Google boss warns all photos and emails could be lost forever
Google vice-president Vint Cerf has made it abundantly clear this week that our digital media is not safe.
In a world where everything has become available in a digital format, it is easy to forget what those simple yet nostalgic print days were all about. We no longer file invoices in physical space, we simply drag and drop them from our desktop to a little folder where they can live happily ever after. They'll always be recoverable and will always be there when we need them, right?
Topics: News, technology, Vince Cerf, Blog, content, future, Google, publishing
Will holographic technology change the face of publishing?
Project HoloLens is the latest piece of tech to cause a stir. Only ever dreamt of in sci-fi books and films, Holographic environments are a step closer to being part of daily life rather than a mere concept.
With such a huge advancement in the way we could consume media, what would the world of publishing look like through HoloLens?
Topics: Technology, technology, Blog, digital publishing, holographic publishing, HoloLens
It seems that Whatsapp have no idea Whatsup!
Since being taken over by Facebook we haven't seen much change in our user experience on Whatsapp but today marked a big old step backwards for the instant messaging giants. Drum roll please... We can all finally use Whatsapp on desktop!!! Did you feel nothing when you read that? Yeah, I thought as much.
Topics: News, Social Media, Blog
In recent years, with the advent of streaming services such as Spotify and Netflix, it seemed that the way we received content had changed irrevocably and yet book publishing appeared to be bound to many of the same processes it has followed since the first days of print publishing.
