Major companies like Apple, Alphabet, and Facebook have established multiple news-registration and book-tracking apps. Google’s News for Android and iOS remain the go-to news app for millions of readers. The Washington Post (owned by former Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos) had a whopping 87.9 million uniques in March. Facebook missed the mark when it announced Facebook Paper, smartphone-equivalent news and magazine for Facebook. Apple also jumped into the industry with its subscription-based news platform called Apple News+. The company plans to improve its subscription revenue stream of income. Amazon has made advances in the newspaper and e-book industries.

 Insider Monkey states the list of best news and reading apps. Starting with Barron’s App, users can have access to top-level market analysis and robust investment strategies. The monthly fee is $119.99. It includes full access to both Barron’s U.S. and Asia Editions. Most articles on Seeking Alpha are free, but an annual subscription provides Unlimited conference calls, free access to the site, access to our investment tools. Premium memberships offer a custom news feed that is short and compact. The WSJ is one of the most expensive $40/monthly subscriptions. Politics, Opinion, World News, U.S. News, and the Economy are among the topics covered by users in the “App” app. On Fox Business App, stocks and exchanges are all fully tracked and notified. Subscribers can get the latest market and news updates. The Bloomberg News app contains real-time data and cutting-driven portfolios. Articles on Bloomberg are distinguished by having prestigious experts from Bloomberg authors. This app shows market data and can be sorted and filtered by specific areas. In The Street App, a Wall Street news source is named. TheStreet.com has actionable information. The app has its rating system called “TheStreet Ratings”. The CNBC Breaking News app keeps the user informed of breaking news, even when the app is closed. Users can build real-time watchlists to monitor topics and portfolio stocks.

Pocket helps you save content anywhere, in emails or browsers. Autofill across applications, save content anywhere. Pocket even reads articles for you. Subscription does away with advertising. Flipboard is a magazine-like application that places the focus on readability over design. Users determine their favourite websites and choose the types of articles, and the app delivers a personalised magazine from various sources. Flipboard has more than 140 million active users. For the low price of $50, Inoreader offers you receive free content each year. Rule-based automation and feed filtering also enhanced the user experience. More details are in the article 15 Best News and Reading Apps.

 

 

 

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