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Welcome to our latest design update, Ars 9. 0!
Thursday, October 3, 2024
You can key your way through stories, opening and collapsing headlines to see a preview. If you want a minimal, text-focused, power-user interface, this is it.
The sub-only modes will offer non-subscribers a visual preview for anyone who wants to see them in action.
Another feature we're adding is a "Most Read" box. Top stories from the last 24 hours will show up there, and the box is updated in real time. We've never offered readers a view into what stories are popping quite like this, and I'm excited to have it.
If you're a subscriber, you can also customize this box to any single section you'd like. For instance, if you change it to Space, you will see only the top space stories here.
Speaking of sections, we're breaking out all of our regular beats into their own sections now, so it will be much easier to find just space or health or AI or security stories.
And as long as we're looking at menus, of course our old friend "dark mode" is still here (and is used in all my screenshots), but for those who like to switch their preference automatically by system setting, we now offer that option, too.
Not interested in a topic? Hide it
Our last reader survey generated a ton of responses. When we asked about potential new subscriber features, we heard a clear message: People wanted the ability to hide topics that didn't interest them. So as a new and subscriber-only feature, we're offering the ability to hide particular topic areas.
In this example, subscribers can hide the occasional shopping posts we still do for things like Amazon sales days. Or maybe you want to skip articles about cars, or you don't want to see Apple content. Just hide it. As you can see, we're adding a few more categories here than exist in our actual site navigation so that people aren't forced to hide entire topic areas to avoid one company or product. We don't have an Apple or a Google section on the site, for instance, but "Apple" and "Google" stories can still be hidden.
A little experimenting may be needed to dial this in, but please share your feedback; we'll work out any kinks as people use the tool for a while and report back.
Ars longa, vita brevis
This is our ninth significant redesign in the 26-year history of Ars Technica. Putting on my EIC hat in the late '90s, I couldn't have imagined that we'd be around in 2024, let alone being stronger than ever, reaching millions of readers around the globe each month with tech news, analysis, and hilarious updates on the smart-homification of Lee's garage. In a world of shrinking journalism budgets, your support has enabled us to employ a fully unionized staff of writers and editors while rolling out quality-of-life updates to the reading experience that came directly from your feedback.
Everyone wants your subscription dollars these days, but we've tried hard to earn them at Ars by putting readers first. And while we don't have a paywall, we hope you'll see a subscription as the perfect way to support our content, sustainably nix ads and tracking, and get special features like new view modes and topic hiding. (Oh—and our entry-level subscription is still just $25/year, the same price it was in 2000.)
So thanks for reading, subscribing, and supporting us through the inevitable growing pains that accompany another redesign. Truly, we couldn't do any of it without you.
And a special note of gratitude goes out to our battalion of two, Ars Creative Director Aurich Lawson and Ars Technical Director Jason Marlin. Not only have they done all the heavy lifting to make this happen, but they did it while juggling everything else we throw at them.
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