Wearably Brings RSS Feeds to Google Glass
With more wearable devices entering the market, the way we read
online content could change significantly. Instead of taking out a
smartphone, readers of the near-future will more often read from devices
like Google Glass or the Galaxy Gear.
A new service makes it easier for content from RSS feeds and websites to transition to wearable technology.
Wearably helps publishers display their content on wearable devices such as smartwatches or Google Glass.
Google Glass Gets an Accessory Store
Atlantic Media,
National Geographic and NPR already use the service, created by a three-person team called
Silica Labs.
The company's biggest selling point is its ability to help companies
keep up with the rapidly changing digital content arena while saving
money. Silica Labs co-founder Marvin Ammori told
Mashable that customers come to the company because they know it will avoid "costs that are more unpredictable."
Originally called SimpleWing, Wearably allows users to create Google Glass apps similar to the ones
created by
CNN and
Elle.
The service takes the important elements of an article — headline,
photographs, time of publication — and transfers them to interactive
cards designed to be viewed on wearable devices. Users simply install
the Wearably app and then subscribe to certain outlets. Because many
websites publish content throughout the day, the service allows users to
organize news into morning and evening editions.
Wearably CTO Antonio Zugaldia told
Mashable that publications can organize their content as they wish.
National Geographic, for example, dedicates one section entirely to photographs.
"It's totally up to the publication how they organize their content,"
says Zugaldia. "Our responsibility is to deliver the content to users
in a beautiful way."
Zugaldia also explained that the biggest challenge during the
development of Wearably was working with so many different devices,
which meant a variety of application programming interfaces (APIs). In
addition, the team does not want to overwhelm users with content.
As designer and co-founder Stephanie Nguyen says, these devices can affect how users read content. "
What we're hoping to do is re-imagine the way users consume news
What we're hoping to do is re-imagine the way users consume news," says Nguyen.
To use the service, individuals pay $11 a month while big publishers
pay $449 a month. The publisher plan guarantees distribution of one RSS
feed onto Google Glass, the Sony Smartwatch 2 and the Pebble Watch.
Ammori also revealed that the team is working on developing a way to
bring news to users based on their location and eventually deliver
city-wide alerts to users' devices.
BONUS: 7 Standout Google Glass Apps You Can Download Right Now
Glass To Facebook
Google Glass may not have full
Facebook functionality yet, but it does have a way to share photos to
Facebook. A third-party app appropriately named “Glass to Facebook” makes your Facebook account a contact within Glass, and allows you to share photos you take to your Facebook wall.
Glass Tweet
Glass Tweet
is a bare bones third-party Twitter client for Glass that makes users
twitter accounts a contact within Glass, allowing them to share tweets
to their Twitter timeline much like they might send a photo to a friend.
Reddit Timeline
Glass Explorer
Malcolm Nguyen published one of the first apps for Glass. An app called Reddit Timeline,
the app provides much of the Reddit web experience on Glass. With the
app you can swipe through the top 25 FrontPage posts, upvote or
downvote, and comment. If you see something worth sharing while you’re
out and about, you can share directly to Reddit from Google Glass as
well.
MedRef For Glass
Created at a medical hackathon, MedRef brings facial recognition to Google Glass.
Designed for hospital employees, the app can bring up information such
as a patient’s folder, along with notes about that particular
person—just by looking at them.
Winky
Created by Mike DiGiovanni, Winky is a
Google Glass app that lets you take photos with Glass by winking rather
than saying “Glass take a photo” or using the shutter button on the
device. The app
was released as pure Android source code, and has to be complied and run as an APK on Glass in order to work --- so it’s not for amateurs.
Glassagram
Glassagram is
Instagram of sorts for Glass.
To use the app, you simply share a photo you’ve taken with Glass with
the app, much like you might share an image with a contact. Glassagram
applies all the filters you’ve selected with it to that picture and
sends a bundle of filtered images back to you that can then be shared
with friends.
Fullscreen BEAM
Fullscreen BEAM is the first YouTube app for Google Glass.
The app creates a contact for your YouTube account, and lets you share
videos you record using Glass to that contact, which in turn posts that
video to your YouTube page where you can share it with others.
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