A quick review. Some features are subscriber only while others are available to all web users.
A new beta version of our search now offers “site search” — links to pages on the site that match your search term, as well as to articles, blogs and infographics. In addition, you’ll find a simplified design as well as the ability to display article summaries along with headlines.
Subscription required.
+ MyWSJ.com Beta — Adds New Features
You can extensively customize the Wall Street Journal content you’d like to see, as well as pull in RSS (Real Simple Syndication) feeds from anywhere else on the web and “discover” content by searching through feeds that other users have added. You can drag and drop modules to set up the page exactly as you’d like it.
Subscription required.
+ New WSJ Blog: MarketBeat
MarketBeat column has now been re-launched as a blog. MarketBeat looks under the hood of Wall Street each day, finding market-moving news and analyzing interesting trends and numbers. It’s updated throughout the day and includes noteworthy commentary from the best blogs and research notes.
Subscription not required.
Keep up with the latest business news in our newly revamped Video Center, featuring reporters and analysts from The Wall Street Journal, MarketWatch and Barron’s. You can also watch discussions with columnists from the Journal’s editorial page, plus features on travel, shopping and health from our Personal Journal and Pursuits team.
Subscription not required.
We’ve recently relaunched our WSJ.com Forums, where readers can share their thoughts on topics we cover with other readers and Wall Street Journal writers and editors. New discussions include Making the Grade, about choosing colleges; Talking Business, in which Journal columnist Alan Murray interacts with readers about his Business column; and The Doctor’s Office, in which family practitioner Benjamin Brewer discusses health-care challenges from a physician’s perspective.
Subscription required to post but free to read.
…leading experts on technology issues in online debates.
Subscription not required.
See Also: The Wall Street Journal’s Online R&D Lab (With 4 Usable Services) Now Online
