“We don’t have to ask you anything. We just know, by virtue of you being a Journal reader, what you’d like to read and what you should read. You don’t have to tell us anything.”
The Journal is the latest news organization to build a mobile-first secondary app as a user-interface playground — and then return focus to the core app.
What’s the best way to follow how the news is changing?
Our daily email, with all the freshest future-of-journalism news.
Lichterman, Joseph. "The Wall Street Journal is killing its What’s News app (but bringing lessons from it to its main app)." Nieman Journalism Lab. Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard, 1 Jun. 2017. Web. 9 Sep. 2024.
APA
Lichterman, J. (2017, Jun. 1). The Wall Street Journal is killing its What’s News app (but bringing lessons from it to its main app). Nieman Journalism Lab. Retrieved September 9, 2024, from https://www.niemanlab.org/2017/06/the-wall-street-journal-is-killing-its-whats-news-app-but-bringing-lessons-from-it-to-its-main-app/
Chicago
Lichterman, Joseph. "The Wall Street Journal is killing its What’s News app (but bringing lessons from it to its main app)." Nieman Journalism Lab. Last modified June 1, 2017. Accessed September 9, 2024. https://www.niemanlab.org/2017/06/the-wall-street-journal-is-killing-its-whats-news-app-but-bringing-lessons-from-it-to-its-main-app/.
Wikipedia
{{cite web
| url = https://www.niemanlab.org/2017/06/the-wall-street-journal-is-killing-its-whats-news-app-but-bringing-lessons-from-it-to-its-main-app/
| title = The Wall Street Journal is killing its What’s News app (but bringing lessons from it to its main app)
| last = Lichterman
| first = Joseph
| work = [[Nieman Journalism Lab]]
| date = 1 June 2017
| accessdate = 9 September 2024
| ref = {{harvid|Lichterman|2017}}
}}