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Apple Pulls, Then Reinstates Pulse RSS Reader Due to Objection From New York Times

The iPad app Pulse, a slick-looking RSS reader, has achieved some impressive success and was even mentioned by Steve Jobs at Monday’s keynote. The New York Times forced Apple to pull the app for bizarre reasons.

BY Dan Nosowitz1 minute read

Pulse iPad app

Pulse is a gorgeous-looking iPad app that aggregates news. It’s essentially an RSS reader, like Google Reader or NetNewsWire, but with a nicer interface. It comes prepackaged with a mess of feeds, including the New York Times (and Fast Company).

The app has been successful; it’s reached sales of 35,000 and was even mentioned by name at Steve Jobs’s WWDC 2010 keynote this past Monday. It’s achieved wide acclaim from sources like, well, the New York Times. Yet now the Times Company has complained about the app to Apple, which in turn was forced to pull it.

Why the NYT chose to go after Pulse and not other readers is
unclear–the Times Company hasn’t responded to comment. But Apple
reinstated the app a few hours ago, in its original form, with the NYT
feed as a default. Wired
suggests
Apple may have told the NYT to “shove” its rejection
letter. It’s a
ridiculous objection, after all.

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Let’s count the ways NYT is misinformed here. First, the app uses the publicly available RSS feed, like every other RSS reader. It shows the text that’s viewable in the feed, and if you want to read further (some longer articles, for example), you’re taken to the Web site in the iPad’s browser. So either the NYT is getting tons of new subscribers, or tons of new readers (and thus traffic for its site), or both.

Dan Nosowitz, the author of this post, can be followed on Twitter, corresponded with via email, and stalked in San Francisco (no link for that one–you’ll have to do the legwork yourself).

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Dan Nosowitz is a freelance writer and editor who has written for Popular Science, The Awl, Gizmodo, Fast Company, BuzzFeed, and elsewhere. He holds an undergraduate degree from McGill University and currently lives in Brooklyn, because he has a beard and glasses and that's the law More


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