No More Digital Discount: Conde Nast Raises Prices For Two iPad Magazines

Tablet magazines aren’t exactly flying off the shelves. But Conde is handing loyal readers of GQ and Vanity Fair on the iPad a price hike, anyway.

A Win for Adobe: Condé Nast Will Use It Instead of Rolling Its Own Tablet Magazines

Here’s a win for Adobe, which could use one: Condé Nast, which has been testing the software company’s tablet publishing tool against a homegrown version, is going to use Adobe’s offering instead.

How to Make a Killer iPad Ad

It’s the very, very early days for iPad advertising–just about any tablet-specific ad you see today is an experiment. But Condé Nast thinks it has learned enough in the past few months to offer a few tips to marketers.

Yahoo's Shine Editor-in-Chief Departs for Condé Nast's Lucky Magazine

As Yahoo seeks to sort out its women’s strategy online, Brandon Holley–the editor-in-chief of its main women-focused site, Shine–is leaving for a job with the same title at Condé Nast’s Lucky magazine.

Another Magazine App? Yep. But This One's For the Ladies: Condé Nast Brings Glamour to the iPad.

GQ. Popular Mechanics. Sports Illustrated. Wired. Notice a trend here? Time to try an iPad magazine for the xx set.

GQ’s iPad App Does…Okay

So we’re six weeks past the iPad launch. Has Apple’s gadget saved the publishing business yet? Nope. But it might be generating a few extra bucks.

Did Apple Just Kick Adobe (And Wired Magazine) in the Teeth?

It looks like Apple just stepped up its attacks against Adobe and its Flash standard–used throughout the Web and apparently hated with much passion by Steve Jobs. Caught in the crossfire once again: Condé Nast and Wired Magazine.

Some Web Publishers Take a Pass on the iPad Launch

Lots of publishers scrambled to prep their Web sites for the Apple iPad debut. But some either fell short or didn’t try at all.

Some Publishers Are Wary of Sales on iTunes

Newspaper and magazine companies rushed to prep their titles for the debut of Apple Inc.’s iPad last weekend. But while publishers hail how the tablet computer lets them showcase their wares, some are working to develop ways to sell their publications separately from Apple’s iTunes.

Condé Nast’s Plans for iPad Ads Become Clearer

On the eve of GQ magazine’s debut on the iPad, how its publisher plans to sell advertising on the device is coming into focus. Condé Nast, whose app for GQ is available in the App Store for $2.99, has signed five advertisers for the first issue of GQ under an arrangement that will be used across all titles, which include Vanity Fair, Wired and the New Yorker.