This article was published on September 11, 2014

OS X users: Get a push notification every time TNW publishes a new story


OS X users: Get a push notification every time TNW publishes a new story

A few days ago we added Safari push notifications for OS X to our site.

That doesn’t mean you can’t use it if you don’t use Safari though. You’ll need Safari to activate your notifications but after that you can switch back to any other browser if you prefer. To get notifications activated navigate to https://thenextweb.com/notifications and click the ‘Allow’ button on the browser pop-up.

push

From that moment on, whenever a new post is published you’ll get a discreet banner in the top right of your monitor screen. On the Notifications page you can also fine-tune which notifications you get. The ‘All posts’ option is selected by default and is a good option to start with.

If that becomes too much you can easily adjust your setting and select only a few channels that are really interesting for you. Each channel has the average amount of posts you can expect in that channel.

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There are more things you can do with settings though. If you open your System Preferences and select ‘Notifications’ you can make a few adjustments that make our notifications even more useful for you. The alert style is set to ‘Banners’ by default. This means that when there’s news, a small banner pops up, and then slowly disappears after a few seconds unless you click it, and then you are taken to the post itself.

settings

Some people feel that banners disappear too fast. Apple doesn’t have a setting to show them longer, but they do offer the ‘Alerts’ option. If you select that the alert stays on the screen and now has a ‘Close’ and ‘Open’ button.

The notifications also line up neatly below each other like you see here. That’s the option I use, as I like seeing what I missed when I’ve been away from my computer for a few hours.

display

If you want to pause or stop the notifications you can always revisit the Notifications page and adjust your settings. It’s that simple.

Since we quietly enabled the setting last week, we’ve had about 200 people per day sign-up for Notifications and we’ve sent out something like 10,000 notifications per day. The service runs through Roost which handles all the back-end stuff and made it easy for us to implement this. It’s a neat system and we hope to be able to also offer it to Chrome, Firefox and other platforms in the future.

MOAR TNW!

It’s all in line with our goal to make it as easy as possible for you to keep track of our news updates. We already have a weekly email update with a hand-picked selection of articles from the past week and a personal message from our editor-in-chief Martin Bryant every week that you should check out.

We also have our RSS feed that gives you the most important parts of our news or even the full feed if you are a registered Pro user.

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