The Prague Post
Detailed App Info:
Application Description
The Prague Post is a weekly, English-language newspaper covering the Czech Republic and Central and Eastern Europe.
It is the only English-language newspaper in the Czech Republic. Its target audience includes English-speaking expatriates living in the Czech Republic or neighboring countries, Czech readers seeking news from an international perspective and tourists visiting the Czech Republic. With a print run of about 16,000 copies, The Prague Post reaches approximately 35,000 readers a week with its print edition published every Wednesday.
The history of the newspaper began in Prague in 1991, two years after the Velvet Revolution.
When Alan Levy, the paper’s founding editor-in-chief, wrote in 1991 that “we are living in the Left Bank of the ’90s,” he captured the optimism of a new age.
In the past 20 years, much has changed, and many a late-night hospoda colloquium has convened over the relative merits of Levy's bold claim. What is not in doubt is that Prague and Central Europe have grown a great deal since those heady 20th-century days.
Czechoslovakia no longer exists. The Czech Republic is part of NATO and the European Union. Flood waters have risen and receded, as have seemingly countless governments. One mustachioed Václav replaced another, and Škodas are in demand in Western Europe.
And while The Prague Post is two years older than the country itself, it too has changed, including a transition from a local newspaper targeting the expat community into a multimedia information source with global reach.
None of this could have been anticipated in 1991 when most Praguers were happy just to find a working pay phone. Much like the Golden City itself, The Prague Post has become thoroughly integrated in this globalized, still-young century. It now counts paying subscribers in nearly 30 countries on four continents and is distributed in an array of digital formats — Web, PDF, iPad and Kindle among them. Our website is updated on a daily basis with news briefings and regular blog posts.
You can purchase single edition or you can buy one month auto-renewable subscription.
Single edition costs 2,69 EUR.
The price of the one-month subscription is 8,99 EUR.
Payment will be charged to your iTunes account at confirmation of purchase.
Account will be charged for renewal within 24-hours prior to the end of the current period, and identify the cost of the renewal.
The Subscription automatically renews unless auto-renew is turned off at least 24-hours before the end of the current period.
Subscriptions may be managed by the user and auto-renewal may be turned off by going to the user's Account Settings after purchase.
No cancellation of the current subscription is allowed during active subscription period.
It is the only English-language newspaper in the Czech Republic. Its target audience includes English-speaking expatriates living in the Czech Republic or neighboring countries, Czech readers seeking news from an international perspective and tourists visiting the Czech Republic. With a print run of about 16,000 copies, The Prague Post reaches approximately 35,000 readers a week with its print edition published every Wednesday.
The history of the newspaper began in Prague in 1991, two years after the Velvet Revolution.
When Alan Levy, the paper’s founding editor-in-chief, wrote in 1991 that “we are living in the Left Bank of the ’90s,” he captured the optimism of a new age.
In the past 20 years, much has changed, and many a late-night hospoda colloquium has convened over the relative merits of Levy's bold claim. What is not in doubt is that Prague and Central Europe have grown a great deal since those heady 20th-century days.
Czechoslovakia no longer exists. The Czech Republic is part of NATO and the European Union. Flood waters have risen and receded, as have seemingly countless governments. One mustachioed Václav replaced another, and Škodas are in demand in Western Europe.
And while The Prague Post is two years older than the country itself, it too has changed, including a transition from a local newspaper targeting the expat community into a multimedia information source with global reach.
None of this could have been anticipated in 1991 when most Praguers were happy just to find a working pay phone. Much like the Golden City itself, The Prague Post has become thoroughly integrated in this globalized, still-young century. It now counts paying subscribers in nearly 30 countries on four continents and is distributed in an array of digital formats — Web, PDF, iPad and Kindle among them. Our website is updated on a daily basis with news briefings and regular blog posts.
You can purchase single edition or you can buy one month auto-renewable subscription.
Single edition costs 2,69 EUR.
The price of the one-month subscription is 8,99 EUR.
Payment will be charged to your iTunes account at confirmation of purchase.
Account will be charged for renewal within 24-hours prior to the end of the current period, and identify the cost of the renewal.
The Subscription automatically renews unless auto-renew is turned off at least 24-hours before the end of the current period.
Subscriptions may be managed by the user and auto-renewal may be turned off by going to the user's Account Settings after purchase.
No cancellation of the current subscription is allowed during active subscription period.
Requirements
Your mobile device must have at least 567.08 KB of space to download and install The Prague Post app. The Prague Post is available on iTunes for $0.00
If you have any problems with installation or in-app purchase, found bugs, questions, comments about this application, you can visit the official website of Prague Post Prague Post spol, s r.o. at http://www.praguepost.com.
Copyright © Prague Post ltd.