Columnists BBC News Online uses a blog-style system for correspondents to write articles within their specialism. Journalists including
Nick Robinson and
Kamal Ahmed use blogs to provide updates on current events and topics. Editors also provide entries within the "Editors' blog", giving explanations for editorial decisions as well as announcing new features or services. Members of the public are also given the opportunity to comment on entries from journalists and editors. Prior to the adoption of the blog-style, BBC News Online also had a number of topic-specific
columns written by BBC journalists, such as former education correspondent
Mike Baker's
Mike Baker Weekly, and technology commentator
Bill Thompson's bill board (formerly
bill blog). BBC News Online Science Writer
Ivan Noble, diagnosed with a malignant brain tumour in August 2002, shared his experiences of cancer in
Tumour Diary until his death on 31 January 2005.
Magazine The "Magazine" is a section of BBC News Online that includes a number of articles that are not tied to a particular event or topic, unlike the other articles on the site. The editor is Jonathan Duffy, who took over from Giles Wilson in April 2006. A major part of the magazine was the "Magazine Monitor" column, which took an irreverent view on the day's news. It usually included the "Paper Monitor", which provided a commentary on the daily press in the United Kingdom. During the day a series of
caption competitions and oddities were added. On weekday evenings at around 5 p.m. GMT, letters from readers, both serious and light-hearted, were published. Topics could be varied: comments on news stories; how to measure sizes in terms of London
AEC Routemaster buses, or for larger geographical areas,
Wales; spotting people mentioned in news stories whose name is particularly appropriate for their job, etc. Other favourite areas of discussion included the
Flexicon, the gender of Paper Monitor or coming up with sardonic comments about previous letters. On Friday evenings, ready for Saturday morning, an article called "10 things we didn't know last week" collated odd and interesting facts from the week's news. Readers were encouraged to send their own images depicting ten objects to accompany the facts; past examples have included 10 swans flying in formation and 10 toes. Since a redesign of the BBC News Online in September 2006, the Magazine Monitor followed a blog-style layout, rather than as a page updated over the week in a similar way to news articles. Comments were allowed, but not published, other than a selection in the daily letters. On 28 September 2016, the BBC News Magazine was rolled into the broader BBC Stories topic, which itself closed on 19 September 2020.
Have Your Say Have Your Say (HYS) is a discussion
message board on the BBC News website allowing readers to post comments and opinions on select articles. The feature has been present since the beginning of the website.
On This Day On This Day is the name of the BBC's news archive website. It contains an online
digital library of news stories reported by the BBC on the
Second World War and world events from the 1950s to 2005. There are entries for every day of the year, many including
video or
audio reports which can be viewed online. The stories are arranged by years, by themes, by witness accounts and by the correspondents reporting the stories. The front page used to be refreshed daily with past events from the current date, but the site is no longer maintained. Unlike the rest of BBC News Online, it still has a working text only version.
Embedded video and audio The launch of the
BBC iPlayer, with the new
Adobe Flash based BBC Embedded Media Player in July 2007 enabled BBC News and Sport Online to change the way it presented video content. Previously the site had delivered online video content using embedded
RealPlayer video in
pop-up windows branded as the
BBC News Player. From March 2008 the BBC began to gradually introduce embedded video using the EMP into individual news articles and onto the front page. The news player also provides constant live
streaming of the
BBC News channel via the website. This had previously only been viewable in a separate window.
Mobile and text only versions Previously, in addition to the standard website with embedded video and audio, there were
XHTML and
WAP versions optimised for users on mobile devices. A text-only version of the main news website could be accessed via the BBC
Betsie text to speech parser (now discontinued). In March 2010 the BBC announced that the low graphics and
PDA versions of the site would be discontinued. As of May 2010 these versions of the site are no longer available and redirect to the main and mobile websites respectively. As of 23 March 2015, separate mobile and text only versions have been removed, and replaced with a "responsive web design", allowing the presentation of content to adjust automatically for a wide variety of screen sizes, from desktop computer to smartphones and tablet devices. However the low-graphics version of the On This Day pages does still work, as do the text versions of articles linked from it. The BBC also have
mobile apps for news and sport, available on the
Android,
iOS and
Windows Phone systems. The news app launched in 2010, originally for the
iPhone and
iPad, followed by other providers. In January 2015, it was redesigned to include the option to play video and further links within articles to others. == Awards ==