The Korea Herald

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Yahoo hopes to reach readers with iPad magazine

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Published : Nov. 3, 2011 - 11:45

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SUNNYVALE, Calif. (AP) — Yahoo has begun to distribute an iPad magazine that illuminates the Internet company's ambitions and the chronic hiccups that have thrown its fate into doubt.

The free magazine, called Livestand, has intriguing potential because its software can be customized to pull a deep pool of content from Yahoo's website and other participating publishers to cater to each user's interests.

But the magazine didn't arrive until Wednesday, well behind Yahoo Inc.'s own timetable for the product and 19 months after Apple Inc. began selling the iPad.

Since its launch last year, the iPad has thrust tablet computers onto the cutting edge of both technology and media.

Yahoo is counting on Livestand to keep its brand and services relevant as more people embrace the iPad and other mobile devices to consume digital content. The company also hopes that the magazine's customization tools make it easier to determine what each reader likes so advertisers can target their messages at people mostly likely to buy their products.

Yet Yahoo's delays in seizing such opportunities have been a recurring problem during the past decade. A combination of hubris, bureaucracy and poor decision-making caused Yahoo to react too slowly to threats posed by Google Inc. in Internet search and Facebook in social networking. That has left Yahoo badly weakened in two key markets.

Those setbacks are the main reasons Yahoo has been mired in a financial funk during a five-year stretch that saw the company go through three different CEOs who were unable to engineer a turnaround. Yahoo's board has been reviewing whether to sell all or parts of the company since firing Silicon Valley veteran Carol Bartz as CEO nearly two months ago.

If Yahoo remains independent, Livestand may become a key piece of Yahoo's latest comeback attempt.

It represents Yahoo's first major step toward building products primarily aimed at mobile devices before adapting them for desktop computers.

Besides drawing upon Yahoo's own content, Livestand chooses material from ABC, Forbes magazine, Parenting magazine and an assortment of publications devoted to sports and hobbies. Publishers will be offered a chance to sell subscriptions through Livestand next year.

Livestand "is sort of a re-imagining of what Yahoo can be," Blake Irving, Yahoo's chief product officer, told reporters after he unveiled the magazine at the company's Sunnyvale headquarters.

The magazine's debut came nearly nine months after Yahoo offered its first preview of Livestand. At that time, Yahoo said it hoped the magazine would be available in iPad's app store by June.

But Irving said Yahoo needed more time to ensure that the technology provided a smooth experience for readers, publishers and advertisers.

While Yahoo fine-tuned its product, several other digital magazine applications have attracted millions of users. One of the most popular, Flipboard, was hailed by Apple as its "app of the year" for 2010.

In a Wednesday interview, Irving scoffed at the notion that Yahoo's offering was coming too late.

Although the iPad has been around for a while, he said only a small fraction of the 700 million who regularly visit Yahoo's website currently own a tablet computer. That will change, though, during the next few years, if analysts are right in their predictions that tablets will become must-have devices in most households and offices.

"The window is still wide open for tablets," Irving said. "We are still in the very early stages."

Yahoo expects to have Livestand ready when tablets running on Microsoft Corp.'s Windows 8 operating system are ready to be sold. Microsoft hasn't said when Windows 8 will ship, but most analysts believe it will happen during the next eight to 11 months.

Besides Livestand, Yahoo also introduced an iPad app for its email service and another app called IntoNow that recommends content based on what a user is watching on television. Yahoo got the IntoNow technology as part of an acquisition earlier this year.

Irving pointed to the new products as a sign that it's business as usual at Yahoo amid speculation that the company be sold or broken up.

"We still have dreams about what this company can be," he said.

 

<한글기사>

야후, 태블릿-스마트폰 앱 공개

야후가 모바일과 소셜네트워킹 서비스 부문을 강화하기 위한 새 제품들을 내놓았다.

야후는 2일(현지시간) 태블릿 PC와 스마트폰에 사용하는 새로운 멀티미디어 애플리케이션들을 공개하고, 출판사와 광고주들이 애플 아이패드를 기반으로 한 신규 미디어 서비스로 이용하도록 새로운 기술들을 소개했다.

야후의 블레이크 어빙 최고제품책임자(CPO)는 이날 캘리포니아 주 서니베일 야후 본사에서 기자들에게 "(사이버) 공간에서 혁신은 모바일 기기에서 먼저 일어나고 있고, 그것은 사용자들에게 가장 친숙할 뿐아니라 가장 빠르게 성장하는 시장"이라 고 말했다.

이날 공개된 새 제품에는 `라이브스탠드'로 불리는 태블릿을 위한 멀티미디어 뉴스스탠드와 안드로이드 모바일 기기를 위한 날씨 앱, 아이패드용 소셜TV 앱 인투나우(IntoNow) 등이다.

그동안 야후는 컴퓨터가 아닌 태블릿과 스마트폰을 더 많이 이용하는 웹 이용자 들을 위한 더욱 포괄적인 전략이 부족했다는 비판을 받았다.

야후는 지난 9월 경영부실 책임을 물어 캐럴 바츠 최고경영자(CEO)를  전격해고 한 이래 사업 전반에 대한 전략적인 재검토작업을 해왔다.

야후의 어빙 OPO는 야후가 불확실성 속에 어떻게 새 제품 개발에 초점을 맞출 수 있는지를 묻자, 야후의 목표는 바뀌지 않았고 직원들이 혁신적인 제품을 개발하기 위해 계속 헌신하고 있다고 밝혔다.