


To read or letting an article flow by to be marked as read. A user controls the river flow with his finger, stopping The screen is structured like a river bank and river – with a list of blogs followed to the left and the individual articles flowing past on the right. The app I use most these days is River of News, for reading blogs and newspapers that are distributed by an RSS feed. Most reader apps notify you when new content is available and offer a measure of how much content you have yet to review. The Markets section of The Wall Street Journal and the latest economic indicators and releases from the National Bureau of Economic Research, all in the same place. Many magazines and newspapers have an RSS feed, Twitter feed or both, and often have separate feeds for separate sections, so you could review material from, say, the DealBook and Economix areas of The New York Times, I find these more time-effective ways to skim through a range of content.

Stand for really simple syndication) and Twitter feeds. While these various sites and apps offer excellent content, over time I have stopped going to them directly and instead read all that content through RSS (a mode of information distribution on the Web its initials (Did you know that Economix has a Twitter feed?). Of course, I regularly read this Economix blog, to see what my fellow bloggers and our readers have to say. “editors’ highlights.” Users can view The Economist’s compilation of economic and financial indicators, and the app will also play an audio version of feature articles. Users can subscribe to the digital edition, purchase a single issue or view selected The Economist magazine has an app for mobile devices that parallels its print edition, in terms of both content and subscription options.
VK.COM ECONOMIX PRO
Some data is also available on Canada and Mexico, including exports to and imports from the United States and currency exchange rates.īeyond these apps I use for reading, I use PocketCAS Pro to automate relatively simple algebraic I also like Economy for iPad, which has major national economic data and state-specific data on unemployment, per-capita personal income, Louis creates an app for accessing its huge library of economic data and graphing utilities.) (I long for the day when the Federal Reserve Bank of St. I like A2ZEconomy for viewing major economic data, such as gross domestic product, housing prices, inflation and so on. Mulligan is an economics professor at the University of Chicago.Īlthough economists haven’t yet discarded their laptop and desktop computers, the mobile-device revolution has changed how they and their students work.Īt the University of Chicago, I see more mobile devices from Apple - the iPhones, iPods and iPads - around campus than I do BlackBerrys, or, for that matter, pencils.
