
Much of what we do at Flipboard has value independent of what device it’s consumed on: curating the best stories from all the topics, sources, and people that you care about most. Now we’re coming full circle and bringing Flipboard to the web. In late April, Flipboard CEO Mike McCue said his application had 56 million readers.Ĭheck out some photos of Flipboard on the web below.Flipboard launched during the dawn of the smartphone and tablet as a mobile-first experience, allowing us to rethink content layout principles from the web for a more elegant user experience on a variety of touchscreen form factors. Palo Alto, Calif.-based Flipboard has raised $60.5 million to date from investors including Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Index Ventures, and Jack Dorsey. If you have created your own magazines with Flipboard and want to see them on the web, just go to (in the profile space, put your user name). To see an example of a Flipboard magazine on the web, check out Lonely Planet’s Road Trips or other magazines in Flipboard’s community.

The company intends to bring the full Flipboard experience to the web by the end of 2013 or 2014. This is just the first step for Flipboard on the web the company still hasn’t delivered all of the Flipboard reading features such as pulling in shared articles from the web. Flipboard magazines on the web look similar to what you’d find on smartphones and tablets, with the clean layout of text and photos intact.

Now these magazines, created by individuals and companies, are viewable on the web, a way for the app to hit more users and be more accessible.
