Feedly embraces app development by opening up API to all

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Feedly just got markedly more developer-friendly. The news aggregator has added a slew of new third-party apps to its platform and has also opened up its new cloud API to all interested parties, starting…now. According to a post on the company’s blog, it enlisted 50 developers over the course of half a year to create an elastic programming interface that lets people create apps in less than a week. Interested developers can download the API at the source link below. You can also visit Feedly’s page to check out the selection of currently available apps.

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Via: Android Police

Source: Feedly, Building Feedly

Preva opens up its fitness API, outside devs can now gamify your workout data

Not content to simply motivate your workouts, fitness equipment manufacturer Precor is opening up its Preva API so other developers can integrate your sweat… err, data. According to the company, the Preva Developer Portal will allow devs to implement features like contests based around achievements and milestones — distance traveled, for example — based off the firm’s collected stats. It already counts wellness reward app EveryMove as a believer, and after linking your EveryMove and Preva accounts, your exercise info will automatically start earning you product discounts and other rewards. This could effectively allow apps such as Runkeeper to tap into your morning routine on Precor machines, thus giving you a more realistic idea of just how many calories you’re burning on a daily basis.

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Source: Preva

iPhone 5s packs M7 motion-sensing chip, CoreMotion API for more accurate tracking

iPhone 5S packs M7 motion sensing chip, CoreMotion API for more accurate tracking

Apple’s new flagship iPhone 5s is about to have much more detailed information about how much its users are moving, thanks to a new M7 “Motion co-processor.” Unveiled during today’s live event, it works along with the new 64-bit A7 CPU to measure motion data continuously from the accelerometer, gyroscope and compass without draining the battery as heavily. It looks like the iPhone 5s will be ready to take over for hardware extras like the FitBit or Nike Fuel wristband, but with a new CoreMotion API, devs for those companies and others can pull the information into their apps. The CoreMotion API specifically works to identify user movement, and offers “optimizations based on contextual awareness.” Overall, it’s very similar to what we’d heard would be in the Moto X, although we haven’t seen all of these extra sensors used for activity tracking quite in this way. Nike was on hand with a new Nike+ Move app that used the M7 and GPS to track users’ activities, and we wouldn’t be surprised if others follow closely behind. Nike called the Move app an “introductory experience” to Nike Fuel in a tweet, so maybe it’s planning to upsell customers on (potentially?) more detailed tracking with its hardware add-ons afterward.

Check out all the coverage at our iPhone ‘Special Event‘ 2013 event hub!

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Sony’s Camera Remote API allows WiFi-equipped devices to control its cameras, act as a second screen

Sony's Camera Remote API allows WiFiequipped devices to control its cameras, act as a second screen

This year’s IFA has been rather eventful for Sony: the company unveiled a new handset, some interesting cameras and even a recorder that can turn you into the next Justin Bieber. But lost in the shuffle was an announcement that the Japanese outfit’s also releasing its Camera Remote API, albeit in beta. Sony says the idea here is to provide developers with the ability to turn WiFi-ready devices, such as smartphones and tablets, into a companion for many of its shooters — i.e. act as a second display or be able to shoot images / video remotely.

The Camera Remote API will be friendly with novel products including the Action Cam HDR-AS30, HDR-MV1 Music Video Recorder and both DSC-QX lens cameras, as well as older models like the NEX-6, NEX-5R and NEX-5T. This is definitely good news for current and future owners of any of the aforementioned, since the new API can certainly add much more value to Sony’s cameras via the third-party app creations that are born from it.

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Via: Pocket-lint

Source: Sony

Amazon extends its Associates program to Android app developers with new API

Amazon extends its Associates program to Android app developers with new API

It looks like you may well start seeing more links to products sold at Amazon in your Android apps. The company has just announced the launch of its new Mobile Associates API, which will let app developers hook into its popular Associates program to earn a kickback of up to six percent on all products sold through their apps. Those purchases can be made either entirely within the app or through an external link to Amazon, and the API covers both Amazon’s own Kindle Fire tablets as well as other Android devices (we wouldn’t hold your breath for iOS support). In announcing the new option, Amazon said that it hopes it will provide an alternative revenue stream to fully paid, ad-supported or “freemium” apps for developers, but it’d also obviously also get quite a bit in return itself if they fully embrace it.

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Source: Amazon

YouTube raises limits on video use in third-party apps

YouTube for Android circa 2013

YouTube launched its Data API to let developers integrate online video into their apps, but the modest caps on daily use have limited the potential of those apps. As of today, YouTube is offering much more breathing room: developers now have 10 times more transaction units each day, and uploads require 10 times fewer units. The extra headroom should lead to apps that not only include many more YouTube videos, but also call more frequently on clip data. While it will likely take some time before we see software that takes advantage of the higher limits, we wouldn’t be surprised if our favorite apps become multimedia extravaganzas in the near future.

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Via: TechCrunch

Source: YouTube for Developers (Google+)

Google Glass augmented reality gets real-time demo

We already saw augmented reality on Google Glass last month as developer Brandyn White created an augmented reality UI that uses Mirror API to display information over still images. Now White and fellow OpenGlass developer Andrew Miller have now been able to demonstrate AR in real-time. This opens the door for displaying useful info over […]

Amazon is down, it’s not just you [UPDATE: Resolved]

This afternoon the team at Amazon’s homepage have reported a temporary outage in service as they “make some improvements” to their service. This down time is not yet recorded officially in Amazon’s server status listing save a small blip in the North Virginia Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud. There it’s reported that “increased API error rates […]

Evernote starts rate-limiting third-party apps, hopes for minimal impact

Evernote starts ratelimiting thirdparty apps, hopes for minimal impact

With over 50 million note-taking users, Evernote has a lot of traffic on its hands — enough so that the company is now rate-limiting third-party software that relies on its API. As of today, new apps can only sync a certain amount of information with Evernote in a given hour. While the caps aren’t clearly defined and are likely to change, Evernote will start throttling all existing apps on November 1st. This isn’t necessarily the prelude to a Twitter-style crackdown on third-party clients, however. As many apps sync their data sparingly, Evernote doesn’t foresee many companies running into the API limit. It primarily anticipates problems with apps that sync everything, and it’s offering to chat with affected developers to minimize trouble. Evernote’s promises aren’t guaranteed to reassure app designers, but they suggest that end users might not notice the difference.

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Via: The Register

Source: Evernote Techblog

Path expands API access, now supports WordPress and other hand-picked apps

Path expands API access, now supports WordPress and other handpicked apps

Path has previously limited its third-party app integration to the Nike+ platform, but the company just opened its doors a little wider. App developers can now ask for permission to use Path’s sharing API, which they’ll get if Path sees such apps as a logical fit. To get the ball rolling, the social network has already granted access to 13 partners that include WordPress, Strava Cycling and a bevy of smaller image services. Only some of these developers can send app content to Path as of this writing, but the rest should support the API in the weeks ahead.

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Source: Path