The Copenhagen Post

The Copenhagen Post,[1] also stylized CPH Post, is a weekly newspaper providing Danish news in English both nationally and internationally; it is the only English-language newspaper printed regularly in Denmark.[1]

The Copenhagen Post
TypeWeekly newspaper
FormatTabloid
Owner(s)CPHPOST.DK ApS
PublisherEjvind Sandal
EditorBen Hamilton
FoundedNovember 1997
Political alignmentNeutral
LanguageEnglish
HeadquartersCopenhagen, Denmark
Circulation12,000–15,000
Websitecphpost.dk

History and profile

Although founded by San Shepherd in 1997,[2] the first printed edition of The Copenhagen Post shipped in February 1998. Since the year 2000, The Copenhagen Post has been published by Ejvind Sandal. In 2002, Jesper Nymark stepped in as CEO. Hans Hermansen is the current CEO as of 2018.[3]

As of 2018, the current editor-in-chief is Ben Hamilton.[3]

Content

The Copenhagen Post has been engaged in editorial cooperations with national news service Ritzaus Bureau and daily newspaper Jyllands-Posten, as well as supplying daily news in English to the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the European Commission, and Jyllands-Posten.

Content typically includes politics, business, education, finance, and general news. Each week the paper includes a comprehensive In & Out entertainment guide founded in May 1998 by Thomas Dalvang Fleurquin (Guide Editor 1998–2008).

In addition to the weekly newspaper that can be subscribed to, The Copenhagen Post can be bought at newsstands and found for free at certain locations such as the Copenhagen Airport. Hardcopy subscribers can also download a password secured PDF copy of the newspaper from the website.

gollark: Robotics progress and increasingly good tracking stuff might actually make riots and stuff not work fairly soon.
gollark: Brevity good, verbosity bad.
gollark: Are you... complaining about the anthropic principle or something...?
gollark: This seems really implausible? The only operation I can see a GPU doing for photos is scaling, for which the algorithms are pretty standard. Text rendering is trickier, though. Fingerprinting based on quirks in that with browser canvases exists, but I doubt this works on a low-resolution paper and it'll not tell you the GPU directly.
gollark: Do things, but not Visual Basic things.

References

  1. "About Us". cphpost.dk. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  2. "The Copenhagen Post". Expat Guide. Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
  3. "Our Employees". cphpost.dk. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
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