A new leak has confirmed Apple’s plans to launch its new Apple News subscription service on macOS, as well as iOS.
Apple developer Steve Troughton-Smith, who has early access to macOS Mojave 10.14.4, shared screenshots that highlighted the new feature in the upcoming release.
His screenshots show off notifications from the Apple News app, alerting users to new issues of premium titles such as National Geographic, Fast Company, and Bon Appetit.
Unsurprisingly, it looks like Apple News' magazine service is prepared to launch on macOS too pic.twitter.com/df0oyJXvjF
— Steve Troughton-Smith (@stroughtonsmith) March 12, 2019
That’s on top of the information we’ve already found in iOS 12.2, with developer screenshots confirming ‘Apple News Magazines’ as the official name of the new service.
Apple News Magazines is expected to launch at $9.99 per month and allow subscribers to access an unlimited selection of premium titles for one set price.
In addition, the firm is expected to include paywalled premium news content from publishers such as The Wall Screen Journal, but the company wants a 50 percent cut of subscription revenue.
More on Apple News Magazines
As seen in Steve’s findings, subscribers will be able to download PDF magazines to their iPads, iPhones, and macOS devices, and store them offline for later reading.
Genres include automotive, business, hobby, entertainment, fashion, cooking, fitness, and home and gardening, alongside mainstream news titles offering premium, ad-free content.
There's a bunch you can discern about Apple News' magazines from what's in the OS betas: for example, the magazines are PDF-based (like most iPad magazines), and issues can be stored offline. The magazine genres are listed as pictured. Most of its code is written in Swift pic.twitter.com/Uc1gN0qygu
— Steve Troughton-Smith (@stroughtonsmith) March 12, 2019
We’ll know for sure what Apple has planned for its Apple News Magazines subscription service, when the company takes to the stage on March 25.
As well as showing off the new magazine and news content service, Apple is widely rumored to lift the lid on its upcoming TV streaming service, set for release later in the year.
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