Yikes!

What I want for Christmas. Bet the UK Ministry of Transport will ban it — like it did the Segway. Only available in the US at the moment. Website here.

The Daily Digger

You have to admire Murdoch. He never gives up. Today he launched The Daily, the first iPad-only newspaper. Annoyingly, it’s not yet available from the UK iTunes store. But I look forward to trying it when it is.

The Guardian has a review of the first edition.

LATER: Rory Cellan-Jones was at a conference I attended today, and we nattered about it. Needless to say, he’d been able to get it on his iPad (something about a friend with a US iTunes account). His blog post about it is here.

Once you’ve managed to install what is a fairly chunky download, you find a very slick product. You arrive at a carousel, where you can swing through sections which start with news, followed rapidly by gossip, opinion, arts and life, apps and games and sports.

There is hard news – The Daily has a reporter in Cairo who has delivered the first edition’s lead story about Egypt, and there are some stunning photographs from the protests there, coupled with a pithy summary of how the country got to this state. It is though, The Daily, not the Hourly, or Minutely, so what you get is yesterday’s news – the Egypt story already looked way out of date.

But hard news is not what this paper is about, it’s more of a magazine. The overall impression is of middle-market frothy fun with plenty of multi-media twists, from the video clips that accompany movie reviews to Sudoku that allows you to compete with others online.

I had a quick look. It’s neat and clean and well-designed. But the content didn’t grab me — a bit Daily Mailish. I can see a lot of people taking the two-week free trial and then forgetting all about it.

I’ve always thought that people will pay for content — provided it’s really distinctive content. That’s why I cheerfully stump up for the New Yorker and the Economist and the London Review of Books. But it’s also why I can’t be bothered to pay for the Times. It’s not distinctive enough. I suspect the same might be true for The Daily Digger.