The travel iPad magazine, TRVL, launched originally in September of 2010, has seen a number of updates lately – the reason is that the publishing team behind the app recently moved the digital magazine off the Woodwing/Adobe platform onto a platform it has developed itself.
The transition is not an easy one: TRVL is a unique app where a subscription to the magazine means access to over 80 editions (and counting). A subscription is not so much a way to access monthly magazines as it is a way to access the TRVL ecosystem.
TRVL
Launched by Dutch co-founders Jochem Wijnands, a documentary photographer, and Michel Elings, who was responsible for the design and technical portions of the digital magazine, TRVL has become instantly popular inside the Appp App Store, and later the Newsstand, and has come to symbolize for many the potential of the tablet platform.
TRVL emphasizes the photographer, not necessarily the travel writer, leaving the photography to speak for itself.
"We try to make the content feel really personal," Michel Elings told Susan Currie Sivek of
MediaShift this summer. "We don't crop photos, and we don't put text on photos. We respect the photographer and writer. We want to give people the feeling that a writer and photographer went to Amsterdam, and this is what they've seen."
"What is motivating us is the fact that these are historic times, and we can make a difference," Jochem Wijnands told me recently.
For the TRVL team, the launch of the iPad in 2010 opened up some unique opportunities.
"Our first emotion was 'wow, we can start our own magazine' – which used to be so difficult, and now it's easy," Wijnands said. "It was still quite a lot of money involved, but nothing compared to what you would normally need, and you could reach a readership all over the world."
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Jochem Wijnands
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TRVL's approach has been different from the start. Rather than creating a magazine based on print, where the design owes its inspiration from print travel magazines such as National Geographic or a Condé Nast title, and where each issue tries to give readers a broad range of topics, each weekly issue of TRVL concentrates on one destination, as seen through the eyes of the photographers whose work is featured in the issue.
"It's new magazines like ours that show that it is going to be a new game," Wijnands said of TRVL.
Publishing weekly also has tremendous advantages based on the way Apple's App Store works. "I don't think a monthly magazine works because you never use the algorithms of the App Store. When you publish new content, the App Store ranks you higher the next day, so when you publish, you are in a good position for the weekend. When you only do this once a month, you never use your advantage," Elings told MediaShift.
Creating the first iPad magazine app with Woodwing must have seemed like a natural choice – Woodwing is based in Zaandam, just outside Amsterdam.

But since TRVL first launched, Woodwing has changed its mission, now becoming a reseller of the Adobe platform and concentrating on enterprise solutions. The platform probably was never a good fit, in any case. "We are really into less is more," Elings said this summer. "I turned off 90 percent of what you can do with WoodWing because I don't think it helps the user."
So after almost two years of publishing, and over 700,000 app downloads, TRVL's co-founders felt they needed something else.
"So then we starting developing our own software out of frustration with what was available," Wijnands told me. "If there was an acceptable software around about a year ago we would have seriously considered it."
PRSS
One month ago the publishers of TRVL let out word that they would be entering the digital publishing platform business themselves, offering its own publishing solution. Things are proceeding slowly, mainly because the TRVL team is still working out the kinks on their own iPad magazine app.
Changing platforms for tablet magazines is not necessarily an easy thing to do – especially if you want to continue to offer the past issues to your loyal readers. Some major publishers have resorted to launching separate apps for their archives when moving over to a new system. Hearst, for instance, has launched a stand-along app to house the Esquire digital magazines for its tablet editions launched from October 2010 to October 2012. Meanwhile, its updated Newsstand will house the new issues.
For TRVL, though, where all the issues are housed in one app and are part of the basic design of the app, it was necessary to redo all the issues using the new platform (at the time 80 issues).
So an update was posted on November 1 using the publisher's own platform.