HTML5 publishing platform Savory is go

Provides app-like designs for publications and a CMS to build them

HTML5 publishing platform Savory is go
Savory is pushing HTML5 as the future of publishing

In 2010, Treesaver arrived, started by a small band of people who believed the future of publishing involved HTML5. Through the new Savory platform, the technology has now been opened up to a wider audience, enabling people to create a hosted Savory site for a monthly rate, and edit it using a CMS. "The service is for publishers, or writers and editors who are ready to be publishers," said co-founder Roger Black, talking to .net about the service.

According to Black, the service differs from a typical website in providing a responsive Treesaver publication: "Content is automatically laid out in pages that fit any size viewport. Readers click or swipe through content like they would an eBook. Savory is tuned for narrative content – for reading. And that's what most publications are all about."

Currently, themes are limited to 'glossy' (magazine-style), 'newsprint' (for newspaper-oriented publications) and 'hardback' (a classic book design). Black told .net the company was keen to get the CMS right before expanding, but that it would "next bring out a bunch of variants and a number of new themes to broaden a publisher's choices. Meanwhile, there are enough grids in each theme to make each publication distinctive".

We also asked Black if services such as Savory point to a further shift away from native apps, following the lead of the FT. "A Savory pub is really a website, and so I don't have to download anything. It works on my phone, my tablet, my laptop and my PC – even though they have different operating systems," he said of the benefits. "If I want to share a story on Twitter, Facebook, or by email, my friends can follow the link wherever they are, and on whatever device they happen to have."

In part, Black argued this trend was down to publishers being scared by Android's growth outpacing iOS, meaning they're no longer content with an iPad or iPhone app: "Frequent OS updates, new devices and new screen resolutions cause code rewrites and increased support. No publisher welcomes the cost. HTML5 is looking better and better!"

3 comments

Comment: 1

It sounds awesome.. until they say they'll charge you upwards of $5,000 at least just to be able to customize their platform with your webfonts, design tweaks, and etc.. (at least that's what it sounded like; "Design fees start around USD $5,000"). Hopefully they meant that's how much they would charge you to do it for you...

Curbed my enthusiastic immediately; With AJAX, combined with Backbone, Node, MongoDB (or any schema-less database) or/and jQuery Mobile, I'm sort of confused why you can't achieve something like (if not better than) Savory for much, much less.

Comment: 2

Savory's planning to provide different skins for these templates and to build a bunch of new ones. Those will be offered for rates similar to the charter rates now on the site ($49/month).

The $5k customization fee is a rough low-end estimate from Treesaver (a partner in Savory) for us to build a new grid, add JS functionality, or otherwise design a new theme to a customer's requirements. Right now there are conversations about RSS and other XML feeds, integration with ad networks, as well as video hosts. Eventually we expect to add all these features to Savory themes, but we're a small team and some publishers can't wait!

Since Treesaver is open source, you could build your own, of course. But Savory is the most robust CMS integrated with Treesaver so far, and that effort (by ZephirWorks) was as they say non-trivial. Once a publisher scopes out the time and cost of such a project, I think they'll find Savory looks more and more awesome.
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