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Flipboard Brings Its Mobile Magazines To The Web
TechCrunch
Flipboard started on mobile devices, but the magazine app is moving to the web today with the launch of a new site. Its 75 million registered users will be getting access to its superior formatting and curation features for articles, photos and video ...
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Flipboard brings magazines to the web, launches 'Big Ideas'
Engadget
This web edition even lets users with Flipboard accounts subscribe to magazines and "flip" stories right from within the browser. While the mobile app is still the best way to fully experience Flipboard, the web edition supports Chrome, Firefox, Safari ...
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Not Just for Mobile Anymore: Flipboard Magazines Come to the Web
All Things Digital
Like its mobile versions, however, the company's magazines still act like Flipboard. Content is paginated and “flippable,” keeping the action that made the apps so magazine-like to peruse. The HTML5-based pages load in the background, so that flipping ...
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Flipboard Magazines Now Available on Desktop
CMSWire
At its core, Flipboard is designed to bring magazine and newspapers into the digital world withmobile-based digital publications. The company today moved away from its mobile only format so the magazines can be viewed on web browsers. This opens the ...
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Flipboard Extends Its Reach Beyond Mobile Devices As Web Magazines Launch
AppAdvice
Flipboard is one of the most popular personalized news apps available for mobile. Now, some of that Flipboard magic is coming to non-mobile devices by the way of a Web browser. First launched for iPad in July 2010, Flipboard offers content based on the ...
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Flipboard expands from mobile-only to web
Pocket-lint.com
In other words, starting today, Flipboard users can access magazines without requiring the Flipboard mobile app. In addition, when Flipboard users share magazines, recipients can simply click the shared links to open magazines in desktop browsers IE9+, ...
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So much for mobile only: Flipboard heads to the desktop
CNET
So much for mobile only: Flipboard heads to the desktop. Nearly 75 million mobile users have created more than 2 million magazines, and now the the company wants to bring its flips to the Web. CEO Mike McCue recalls a time when Flipboard was just a ...
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Flipboard No Longer Mobile-Only, Now on Web, Too
CIO Today
There were numerous factors that went into Flipboard's decision to port the app to browsers, but one of them was to build on the potential for their magazine features. For magazine creators, themobile version of Flipboard is very limited due to ...
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