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The best apps you may have missed last month

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August was a big month for apps.

There were plenty of important updates to popular apps like Instagram and Snapchat, interesting acquisitions of apps by some of the biggest players in tech, and a few new releases worth mentioning.

Here's everything you may have missed in the world of apps last month:

SEE ALSO: Snapchat is making it easier to create your own geofilters

Instagram released its own take on Snapchat's Story functionality and gave it the same name.

Instagram Stories is basically Snapchat for Instagram. You can share photos and short videos that disappear after 24 hours.

Despite the striking similarities to Snapchat, a lot of people are already using Instagram Stories. The Facebook-owned app recently told TechCrunch that over 100 million people watch Stories at least once a day. That's one-fifth of Instagram's entire user base.

 



Spotify debuted a personalized playlist for brand-new music that uses the same technology behind Discover Weekly.

Spotify's Release Radar is just like Discover Weekly, but only for brand-new music.

Like Discover Weekly, Release Radar will be updated with roughly two hours of new music once a week. In an interview with Business Insider, Spotify lead engineer Edward Newett said Release Radar was "just the first in a line of playlist experiences following in the footsteps of Discover Weekly."

He described Release Radar as a "mix" of new singles from the artists Spotify knows you listen to and from ones you might not have heard before. Spotify's audio-research team in New York City is also using deep-learning techniques to analyze the audio and determine which specific songs from a new album or EP you would like most.



Apple finally released a new iPhone remote app for the Apple TV.

Apple finally redesigned its remote iPhone app for the Apple TV. You can use the app to control the Apple TV, enter passwords with the iPhone's keyboard, and use Siri with the latest Apple TV model.

It's much better than the physical Apple TV remote and free to download in the App Store.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Here's another clue about Snapchat's secret hardware project

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Evan Spiegel Miranda KerrWe just got another hint about Snapchat's super-secret hardware project.

The company has reportedly been hustling on a stealthy smart glasses project, and we now know that it recently became a member of a Bluetooth special interest group that will allow it to build products using the wireless communications technology. 

Snapchat would likely use Bluetooth technology to allow its headset to connect to a users' app. 

The Financial Times first spotted the newly minted "adopter" membership, which you can see evidence of below:

 

 

Snapchat

Sources previously told Business Insider that Snapchat is "very serious" about a hardware play. The company acquired a Google Glass-like startup called Vergence Labs back in 2014 and has since hired a bunch of other eyewear and wearable technology experts. 

Join the conversation about this story »

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Here are all the clues we've found about Snapchat's secret smart glasses

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snapchat employee glasses

Snapchat's hardware ambitions are supposed to be a secret. Yet, there have been enough clues left behind (thanks to a combination of LinkedIn and the Sony hack) for us to begin piecing together a picture of what exactly Snapchat is up to.

The company started its eyewear ambitions as early as 2014, and most recently joined a Bluetooth special interest group as an "adopter" — an indicator that it's going to use that technology potentially in its secret glasses. 

Here's what we know so far about Snapchat's secretive hardware plans:

SEE ALSO: How to break into Silicon Valley if you have no idea where to start

Snapchat's hardware ambitions started in March 2014 when it paid $15 million for Vergence Labs, a company that made glasses that could record video (pictured below on a model).

The acquisition was supposed to be a secret, but it came to light in the aftermath of the Sony hacks.

Deal terms in Sony Entertainment CEO Michael Lynton's (a Snapchat board member) emails suggest Snapchat paid $15 million for the company, with $11 million of the price in cash and $4 million in stock.



Vergence Labs was famous for its "Epiphany Eyewear", a line of smart glasses that could record video and store up to 32GB of data.

Of the Vergence Labs team, several employees, including one of its cofounders, still work at Snapchat.



At the time, no one knew why Snapchat had bought a glasses company, but one of its investors had talked about an easy way to share from a smart device to Snapchat. “People haven’t thought about use cases on new computing platforms. In one tap you take a photo, one more and you can share it. Imagine [the difficulty] trying to post on Instagram from a Google Glass device,” Thomas Laffont, managing director of Coatue, told Forbes in 2014.

Source



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Snapchat kills 'Live Stories' for cities, fires human curators

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Snapchat New York Live Story

Snapchat will no longer make daily "Live Stories" for cities, the company confirmed to Bloomberg on Wednesday. As a result, Bloomberg reports that about 15 Snapchat employees who curate local Live Stories will lose their jobs.

The Live Stories, which featured videos submitted by Snapchat users in a particular city throughout the day, were shown in Snapchat's app next to its coverage of big events like the VMAs, political debates, and sports games.

The company has relied on a team of human curators to stitch together videos from Snapchat users into daily stories and add captions with information sourced from local news outlets.

“A small number of Local Story curator positions were eliminated in our Los Angeles and New York offices, as the result of changes to our Local Story Coverage,” Snapchat told Bloomberg in a statement. “We’re thankful for the contributions from these team members.”

Facebook recently fired the human editors who curated its Trending news section and replaced them with an algorithm-driven system. It's unclear if Snapchat will continue using humans to curate its Live Stories for big events and national news.

We've reached out to Snapchat for more information and will update this story when we hear back.

SEE ALSO: A former Facebook news team worker says management basically ignored them

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NOW WATCH: How to Snapchat from over 20,000 feet — as told by the Everest climbers that just did it

Snapchat could go public as early as this year

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Snapchat Evan Spiegel

Snapchat could look to go public this year, according to a new report from The Information.

While it has approached some banks, it hasn't settled on a firm yet, the report says.

This isn't too surprising: Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel has been clear about the company's IPO ambitions in the past, though he has been tight-lipped about a time frame. In an appearance at the Recode conference in May 2015, Spiegel said "we need to IPO" and that the company has a plan to do so.

It's been revving up its advertising products to pump its revenue numbers. A recent eMarketer report predicts that the company will near $1 billion in advertising revenue in 2017 and nearly double that by 2018.

It's also been hiring professionals with IPO experience, including an accounting manager whose previous role included "IPO readiness," according to a LinkedIn profile.

Earlier this year, Business Insider noticed that Snapchat had also quietly added a seasoned IPO specialist, Stan Meresman, to its board in 2015 — the latest sign that the fast-growing messaging app is preparing for a public-market debut even as it raises huge sums of money from private investors.

On his personal website, Meresman describes himself as a financial expert who "advises CEOs & CFOs on preparing to become a public reporting company, IPO process, operating as a public company, and scaling the company for rapid growth."

He says he's guided four companies through successful IPOs — LinkedIn, Zynga, Riverbed Technology, and Polycom — and he served as the CFO at chipmaker Cypress Semiconductor during its IPO.

Snapchat's acting CFO, Drew Vollero, hasn't taken a company public before, but he has worked at a publicly traded one. Vollero joined Snapchat in August 2015 after spending 10 years at Mattel.

SEE ALSO: Here are all the clues we've found about Snapchat's secret smart glasses

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NOW WATCH: These kids from Madagascar had an amazing reaction to using Snapchat for the first time

ESPN's digital boss reveals how ESPN snags millennials, and 18 million people every month on Snapchat (DIS)

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john kosnerThe dominant media narrative in recent months around ESPN has been this: ESPN is losing cable subscribers, slowly but surely.

There has been a variety of theories as to why, posited by industry insiders and analysts. Business Insider recently spoke to Bleacher Report CEO Dave Finocchio, who said he thought ESPN had been hurt by the rise of digital media and shifting expectations of younger audiences.

To say that ESPN disagreed with Finocchio’s assessment is an understatement.

“The one thing Dave was right about was that [Bleacher Report] started from a smaller base [than ESPN],” ESPN’s digital boss, John Kosner, told Business Insider during an interview about ESPN's digital ambitions.

Kosner said ESPN’s decline in cable subscribers has to do with the evolution of pay TV as a whole, not with ESPN losing the love of millennials. On the digital side in particular, ESPN’s brand is stronger than ever, particularly among younger viewers, Kosner said.

One indicator: Snapchat.

Kosner pointed to ESPN’s booming Snapchat Discover channel as evidence of its continued relevance to younger viewers. ESPN’s Snapchat Discover channel gets a whopping 18 million unique viewers per month, and 2.3 million per day, Kosner said. That makes it the third most-watched channel on Snapchat Discover, according to Kosner.

More broadly, ESPN reached 30.6 million US adults aged 18-34 across its digital platforms in July, according to comScore. That blows its sports rivals away. ESPN's next closest competitor, Yahoo Sports-NBC, snagged 17.1 million.

The digital audience

Kosner doesn’t think ESPN’s digital operation serves a fundamentally different type of consumer than its cable channels, but he does think there's a different sports sensibility in younger generations.

“Sports fans' tastes are changing,” he said.

Primarily, he said that millennials are interested in a wider variety of sports, particularly those with an international focus. He pointed to spiking interest in the Premier League soccer as an example, but also to eSports, where ESPN is a leader in coverage.

On the whole, ESPN streams more than 19,000 sports events annually, according to the company.

One new product that will try to tap into those broad tastes is an upcoming upcoming “a la carte” ESPN streaming service, which doesn’t require a cable subscription. It will include games and related content from the MLB, NHL, college football and basketball, tennis, rugby, cricket, and so on — but nothing that is playing on ESPN when you flip on cable, according to parent company Disney’s CEO Bob Iger.

Cannibalization

With new avenues for young people to consume ESPN, like Snapchat, one worry is that they won’t need to tune into ESPN staples like SportsCenter — or even have a cable subscription.

“I do not believe in cannibalization,” Kosner said, even of younger audiences. He also pointed out that SportsCenter has the youngest audience composition on late night TV, younger than Fallon, Kimmel, and so on. But even though Kosner doesn’t believe in cannibalization, that doesn’t mean ESPN’s digital parts exist simply to serve its cable juggernaut. “Every initiative should be driving value,” Kosner said.

Ultimately, Kosner says ESPN's massive success is sometimes taken for granted, that those expectations are baked into everything ESPN does.

But it's like being on the 1927 Yankees, Kosner said. "It's a good problem to have."

SEE ALSO: Bleacher Report's CEO explained why ESPN is in trouble

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John Mayer is the only celebrity you need to follow on Snapchat

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John Mayer snappers block snapchat

You probably don't think of the word "comedian" when John Mayer's name crops up in the news or conversation, but boy are you wrong. Mayer is a lot of things — singer, songwriter, master guitarist, controversial philanderer. But his phenomenal sense of humor often goes unnoticed by the masses.

Spend a week watching Mayer's Snapchat stories, and you'll be surprised by his self-awareness and wit. Though Mayer called himself "fashionably late" when he joined Snapchat in early 2016, he's quickly become one of the greatest celebrities using the medium. 

A photo posted by johnmayer (@johnmayer) on

Mayer has several ongoing Snapchat bits. One is a joking modification of Netflix movie descriptions. Mayer figured out that the default white text (when shrunk to miniscule size) can pass for the regular Netflix text. He plugs nonsensical explanations into innocent movie titles, and then hand draws a baffled "what?" or "huh?" next to it.

John Mayer Netflix part 3Another running gag is his take on the AMA ("ask me anything") format, usually featuring a surprisingly high-profile celebrity. Mayer takes one snap warning viewers that the AMA is about to happen. Then the next snap is often a video clip, in which he just barely begins talking before the feed cuts. Finally, he shows another picture with the celeb captioned "That was an AMA with ____!"

Ask Shaq part 1 John Mayer SnapchatWhatever your existing feelings about Mayer might be, it's hard to deny his creativity when it comes to snap stories. He's also extremely self-aware. Every negative feeling you may have towards him isn't lost on the singer. Every once and awhile he gets meta about his extreme efforts in Snapchatting. 

Watch this story from May 21, in which Mayer pretends to consult his therapist about the way he's using the app. The session concludes after Mayer decides to try and lip sync "One Dance" with a face filter at the recommendation of this "therapist."

Mayer was known awhile as a Twitter addict, and even cited it as a point of contention between him and then-girlfriend Jennifer Aniston. After a while he moved to Instagram, where he posted gems like a video of him crooning a song to a field of cows.

"Cows are big fat dogs that you can eat, without the fear of reprimand from fellow maaaan," he sings. "Oh cows, oh cows! Cows."

A video posted by johnmayer (@johnmayer) on

But now Snapchat has Mayer's full attention, and his quality content doesn't seem to be going anywhere. There are plenty of going themes in Mayer's snaps worthy of discussion (frequent Bob Saget cameos, nerf gun fights, a fantastic black lab named Moose), but you'll have to see them for yourself to get the full picture. 

In a world where celebrities like Justin Bieber are attempting to redeem their personal brand through song or seemingly-staged public relationships (we're looking at you Taylor Swift), seeing Mayer's comedic take on Snapchat is truly the most entertaining. 

Follow along with Mayer's burgeoning career in Snapchat comedy by adding his username johnthekangaroo.

Join the conversation about this story »

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These models prove you can rock a Snapchat filter in real life

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Snapchat filter models

Snapchat's filters can turn anyone into a bee, a deer, or a zebra just by holding their face up to the camera. 

The radical transformations have always been a fantasy living in the app, but fashion brand Desigual turned the filters into its inspiration for New York Fashion Week.

From the flower crown to the puppy dog face, these models captured what it would be like if we all walked around with Snapchat filters on our faces.

Snapchat filters are known for going to extremes. They can turn anyone into a masked "Mad Max" character or a rainbow-vomiting unicorn.



For New York Fashion Week, Desigual brought the digital filters into real life. You can see artists using the app backstage to make sure the models are picture perfect.



The results are stunning Snapchat filters in real life.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

This 16-year-old entrepreneur is making a fortune selling rare sneakers to celebrities

Adidas' ad agency says user retention on its Snapchat videos is 'insane' compared to YouTube

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adidas snapchatAdidas is yet to know the full role of Snapchat in its marketing but it does know that its content is likely to be viewed for longer when it’s on the app compared to other platforms.

It’s one of the early takeaways the sportswear brand hasgarnered from the 20 or so Stories it has posted over the last year. Such has been the level of engagement from those posts that “retention on Snapchat,” is insane for Adidas, claimed Dan Moseley, its account director at We Are Social. Speaking at Social Media Week London, he explained how this was particularly true when retention rates for its Snapchat Stories were compared to its videos on YouTube, which have played a pivotal role in the brand’s revamp over the last 18 months.

“It’s [Snapchat] is regularly topping out 80 to 90 per cent much higher [compared to YouTube],” he said. “That’s really important in showing that we can deliver something that people don’t drop off on.”

Statements like this are few and far between given the unfamiliarity many marketers still have with the platform and the limited experience many have with what metrics they should use. For example, retention is measured by the amount of time someone spends viewing a Snap from beginning to end or how long they engage with a Story. Snapchat shares how many views each post gets in your Story, which Adidas has used to determine whether people are finding its content entertaining from start to finish.

If the performance is to be believed, then it is testament to how the sportswear maker has been able to harness the reach of its football and fashion influencers at a time when it is notoriously difficult to drive views organically on social media. Whether it’s Stormzy creating a Snapchat Story of his music video with Adidas athlete Paul Pogba or Pharrell Williams sharing moments from the LA launch of his own Originals line, the brand is adamant that its success on the platform is down to the influencers it partners rather than accounts it owns.

“We’re really proud of what we’ve done on Adidas Football and Adidas Originals in terms of the accounts but you don’t those accounts to be effective on the platform,” said Chris Watt, social media manager at Adidas, at the same event.

“For a brand like us where we have so many stories we could tell such as for our rugby brand around the World Cup last year or categories around the Olympics. We decided it was the best route to take and actually a better one was using the paid-for-media options and influencers in that instance.”

Geofilters

While being able to pit Snapchat Stories against YouTube has been a fillip for its marketers’ efforts to secure more budget for the channel, there’s also the work they are doing with the app’s other features that is turning heads internally.

More than 500,000 people have used one of the brand’s Geofilters – that’s half a million pieces of user-generated-content within 24 hours on a platform the brand knows over-indexes on its target user. When Stormzy had his birthday at Thorpe Park this summer, Adidas’ present to the rapper was his own Geofilter over the venue that was seen by almost three million people even though there was only 400 at the event. Proof for Adidas that “if you have the right influencers then using Geofilters can have huge reach,” said Watt.

“We all know that a brand isn’t what it says it is, it’s what other people say it is. Increasingly, in this conflicted world of influencer marketing it’s potential not always what an influencer says about your brand is up to as well [that can be trusted],” he continued. “We’re looking to create genuine relationships with influencers and to help them to reach their goals as much as ours … We want to create long-term relationships with these guys and we’re really proud of some the examples that are unfolding on Snapchat.”

adidas geofilterElsewhere, the brand has been testing Geofilters around its stores; at the store for its Originals brand on Foubert's Place, London, Adidas has erected a Geofilter around it and claimed is seen by around 100,00 people each month – “nice advertising for us,” chimed Watts.

Geofilters have been around for a while, but last month the upstart made the on-demand feature more accessible by launching a toolkit for brands and ordinary users to create their customised location-activated overlays for the messaging app. The format gets to work when a user turns on the app’s location services, giving advertisers the opportunity to offer branding images, logos and other promotional content for as a little as on hour or longer than a week depending on how much they’re willing to commit to a fee that starts at around $5. Moving forward, the brand plans to set-up other Geofilters around more stores.

“We’re confidently creating real-time advocacy via Geofilters and seeing how they do down,” said Watts. “And we’re confidently allowing our ambassadors to tell Adidas stories on Snapchat and we’re confidently positioning our channels as a place where you can find out the latest news on our products (see above).”

Like other brands easing their way into Snapchat, Adidas has only recently begun experimenting with its Lenses, which launched last September. Last week, the brand debuted its first bet on the feature that allows people to add special effects and animations to selfies to encourage fans to see what they looked like wearing its new Z.N.E hoodie.

However, it won’t know how successful the move has been for some time. “You don’t necessarily get stats back as quickly [as you do from other platforms] so we don’t know the full impact it’s had yet,” explained Watts. “But from the examples we’ve seen from our partners at Chelsea and our different athletes we’re excited to see how that went down across Europe.”

The insights will be welcomed by Snapchat, which is amid a drive to educate advertisers on the merits of its platform over others. Mindful that brands are aware they need to shift more spend into mobile, the app’s strategists have been talking up its offering, which is being pitched as a more native and dynamic experience than alternative apps like Facebook.

Indeed, Snapchat’s head of strategy Imran Khan took a thinly-veiled swipe at the world’s largest social network at Dmexco last week (14 September) when he argued that itscompetitors are essentially selling “moving banners” by not putting enough emphasis on sound in video.

SEE ALSO: Advertisers love Snapchat's priciest ad format — and that ought to worry its social media rivals

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REVEALED: Secret video shows Snapchat's new glasses

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Snapchat has been working on secret sunglasses for years, but an unreleased video obtained by Business Insider is the first glimpse at what the product will look like.

Snapchat

Called "Spectacles," the glasses appear to have a small camera on their frame — similar to the prototype Business Insider first noticed that CEO Evan Spiegel had been wearing in public about a year ago.

At the beginning of the video, a ring around the camera flashes lights, apparently to signal it is recording. The rest of the video weaves through images people might want to record, like a kid's birthday party, before it closes on a shot of grandparents watching the film on their phones.

Snapchat

This is the first time there has been public evidence of the project beyond photos taken of Evan Spiegel wearing an early prototype on the beach. The video ends with a title screen that says "Spectacles" by "Snap Inc."

After Business Insider obtained and posted the video, Snapchat told the Wall Street Journal that the company was changing its name to Snap Inc., and that the glasses, called Spectacles, would go on sale soon for $129.

Here's the first commercial:

There are signs that Snapchat could be ready to debut the glasses in New York soon. Zach Kahn posted a photo to Twitter on Thursday that showed a Snapchat ghost with different eyes than normal covering the front of a building on Wall Street.

The end of the Spectacles ad has the same matching "eye" as the ghost on Wall Street does.

SEE ALSO: Snapchat is now called Snap Inc. and will sell its Spectacles for $129

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Signs are already popping up teasing the new Snapchat Spectacles

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Snapchat appears to be teasing its highly-anticipated Spectacles in plain sight, suggesting they could launch soon.

Billboards popped up this week in California, New Jersey, and New York with a different type of Snapchat ghost: this one has a goofy set of eyes. 

In New York, the company had covered a Wall Street storefront with its ghost — only to change its eyes five days later, Twitter user Zach Khan pointed out to Business Insider

 The new eyes perfectly match the logo shown at the end of its leaked Spectacles promotion video.

The glasses could be unveiled at AdWeek on Monday when its Chief Strategy Officer, Imran Khan, delivers his keynote.

Snapchat fans have spotted the billboards in other locations like Hoboken, New Jersey and Snapchat's hometown of Los Angeles. 

In San Francisco, there's a billboard of the new ghost in the SOMA neighborhood that's a hub for a lot of startups. 

Snapchat has been tight-lipped about what it's been working on for years, and the "Spectacles" video obtained by Business Insider is the first at what the product will look like.

Get ready to see more googly-eyed ghosts in the future.

REVEALED: Secret video shows Snapchat's new glasses

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: These kids from Madagascar had an amazing reaction to using Snapchat for the first time

Snapchat is now called Snap Inc. and will sell its Spectacles for $129

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evan spiegel snapchat

Snapchat's name has disappeared.

On Friday, the company announced in a Wall Street Journal article that it was changing its name to Snap Inc.

The name is more fitting since the company is now more than just a social app, CEO Evan Spiegel told The Journal.

Snapchat is now branching into new territory: smart sunglasses.

Called Spectacles, the pairs will sell for $129 — but it's only a limited distribution.

Hours before The Journal's article, Business Insider obtained and published the first video of its new glasses, which hinted that the company would be changing its name.

According to The Journal, the Snapchat Spectacles record 10-second clips of video through their 115-degree-angle lens, which makes it closer to the human eye instead of traditional cameras. The glasses record the video in a circular field instead of the usual rectangle or square and can then wirelessly transfer it your phone, so you can share it with your friends on Snapchat.

The glasses will come in three colors: black, teal, and coral. Snapchat has spent years developing the glasses, but Spiegel referred to them as a "toy," telling The Journal, “We’re going to take a slow approach to rolling them out.” Spiegel added: “It’s about us figuring out if it fits into people’s lives and seeing how they like it.”

Billboards are already springing up for the glasses, suggesting they'll launch very soon.

Here's an excerpt from the video Business Insider obtained earlier:

Snapchat

REVEALED: Secret video shows Snapchat's new glasses

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Everything we know about Snapchat's new camera glasses, Spectacles

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Snap Spectacles

Snapchat isn't just an app anymore.

On Friday the company officially renamed itself to Snap Inc. and announced a pair of camera-equipped sunglasses called Spectacles.

After Business Insider obtained and published a video of the glasses in action, Snap officially announced the news in The Wall Street Journal.

Snap has been secretly working on these glasses for years, dating back to its acquisition of a small startup called Vergence Labs in 2014.

Sources close to the company say CEO Evan Spiegel and cofounder Bobby Murphy have been closely involved in making the glasses with a small, top-secret team known internally as Snap Labs.

We don't know everything about how Snap's Spectacles will work, and the company isn't saying when they will be available besides "this fall." But here's what we do know so far: 

SEE ALSO: Secret video shows Snapchat's new glasses

Snap's Spectacles will cost $129 and come in three colors: black, teal, and coral. They will be available in limited quantity sometime this fall.



The glasses record up to 10 seconds of circular video through a 115-degree-angle lens, which is designed to look closer to how the human eye sees.

RAW Embed

Snap CEO Evan Spiegel recounted a hiking trip he took while wearing the glasses to The Journal:

"I could see my own memory, through my own eyes—it was unbelievable. It’s one thing to see images of an experience you had, but it’s another thing to have an experience of the experience. It was the closest I’d ever come to feeling like I was there again.”



You tap the side of the frames to start recording. A light will then illuminate for the length of the video.

RAW Embed



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

5 reasons Snapchat's new Spectacles could succeed where Google Glass failed

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Snapchat on Friday surprised everyone with two big announcements: First, the company has changed its name from Snapchat to Snap Inc., and second, the company will sell its first hardware product ever this fall: A pair of sunglasses with cameras on them, called "Spectacles."

Snapchat Spectacles

Snap's Spectacles have already drawn many comparisons to Glass, Google's head-mounted computer that was unveiled in 2013 to much fanfare. But Google Glass ultimately failed for many reasons: At $1,500, it was expensive; it was banned in many public places, and it was largely ridiculed by mainstream consumers for looking too geeky.

Here's why Snap's Spectacles can succeed where Google Glass failed. 

SEE ALSO: Everything we know about Snapchat's new camera glasses

Spectacles will be much cheaper than Glass.

Snap CEO Evan Spiegel still considers the first-generation Spectacles "a toy," and its price is a reflection of this. Unlike Google Glass, which was priced like a computer at $1,500 for the first "Explorer Edition," Snap Spectacles will only cost $129, making them much more accessible to the mainstream public. That's around as much as you'll pay for a pair of Ray Bans, but Ray Bans can't record your life from a first-person perspective and share it with the world through Snapchat.

If the low price wasn't attractive enough, Spiegel says Spectacles will only be available in limited quantities when they go on sale this fall. With a small supply and a more attainable price point, this should help generate a good deal of commercial demand.



Spectacles look better than Glass.

Sure, you still might think Spectacles are uglier than your favorite pair of sunglasses, but they certainly look better than Google Glass, which looked downright foreign in some respects — something that did not help the product's already stodgy image. Snap's Spectacles, on the other hand, are much more fashionable and available in three fun colors: coral, teal, and black.



These are the three colors for Spectacles. Matching lipstick not included.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

With Spectacles, Snap is doing something I haven't seen since the 1970s

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Snap Spectacles

I don't know much of anything about Snapchat because I'm frankly just too old to get it.

But I have a 13-year-old daughter, and she and her friends get Snapchat and then some. They use it constantly — it's by far their most beloved app.

Are they going to be instant customers for the newly renamed Snap Inc.'s Spectacles and new wearable video recorder that Business Insider's Biz Carson has been reporting on over the past few days?

At $129 a pop, it's not a super-major outlay for a parent, or even a teen with some money saved up. These things could be big this holiday season, assuming they're even available.

There is something oddly brilliant about Spectacles, and succeed or fail, I think they prove that CEO Evan Spiegel is able to leverage his youth — he's only 26 — to dial into some interesting business opportunities.

They don't look to me a like a built-to-last kind of thing. Actually, they very much remind me of a bunch of el-cheapo fads from my own pre-digital youth in the 1970s. You may have heard of some this goofy stuff, like pet rocks and mood rings.

Spectacles look large and kind of silly — Spiegel has called them a "toy"— and they come in basic black as well as two offbeat colors, the always popular teal and coral. They can only record up to 10 seconds of video, so they're clearly only useful as a Snapchat accessory. You play around with them for a few months and then move on. Fad finished.

Snapchat Spectacles colors

OK, maybe they stick around and are improved. But how much fun could that be? Spiegel has to be too cool to have missed the negative reception that Google Glass received.

One thing I've noticed about digitally sophisticated kids who aren't yet of driving age is that they cycle through their enthusiasms quite a bit faster than previous generations. This appears new because they're all using the mobile internet, but it also feels very '70s to me. That was a decade when all kinds of trends came and went rapidly, in music, culture, fashion, and even politics.

I tried this theory out on my 13-year-old, and she agreed that they were possibly a neat gimmick — they reminded her of some other recent fads, like hoverboards, something I hadn't thought about.

But something that Spiegel probably has.

SEE ALSO: Everything we know about Snapchat's new camera glasses

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Here’s everything we know about Snapchat’s new camera sunglasses, Spectacles

A former Motorola exec is behind Snapchat's Spectacles

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Former Motorola executive Seshadri Tangutur is the Snapchat executive overseeing the Spectacles product, the internet company's first push into building its own hardware, according to new FCC filings. 

Tangutur, the former Corporate VP of Software for Motorola Mobility, joined Snapchat in February 2015 after being recruited by Steve Horowitz, one of its VPs for engineering, a source told Business Insider. What the pair were doing at Snapchat has been a secret. Tangutur doesn't list his title on his LinkedIn, and Horowitz doesn't even have one. 

Tangutur joined Motorola as an executive in 2010, shortly before Google acquired the struggling phone maker. He then served as a VP overseeing Android platform engineering for several years at Motorola, and went to become the corporate VP of Software, according to his LinkedIn profile.

The new FCC filings link the Motorola team as part of the experienced, technical talent behind Snapchat's forthcoming product. Snapchat's Spectacles, which will sell for $129, allow users to record 10 second video clips using the glasses' built-in camera. 

SpectaclesFCC

Snapchat applied in early September for the FCC to approve its new Spectacles since they use Bluetooth Low Energy and WiFi to transmit the video footage. According to the filing, the glasses appear to use the 2402-2480MHz Bluetooth frequency and WiFi frequencies of 2.4GHz: 2.412 - 2.462GHz. 

The glasses appear to use a circular antenna that loops around the camera, as can be seen in this diagram included in the filings. 

Snap Spectacles

The FCC granted authorization for the new glasses on Monday, several days after Business Insider first published a leaked video of the finished product

REVEALED: Secret video shows Snapchat's new glasses

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NOW WATCH: Here’s everything we know about Snapchat’s new camera sunglasses, Spectacles

Millennials would rather delete their main calling app than Snapchat

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millennials texting phones girls single partying

Millennials hate calling on the phone so much that they'd rather delete their main phone app altogether than lose Snapchat.

That's according to a new study from LivePerson, which surveyed 3,000 US smartphone users ages 18 to 65.

Some of the results weren't very shocking — most people prefer texting to calling — but somewhat surprising is the demise of the traditional "Phone" app, even among older generations.

For those ages 35 to 64, the main phone app was the fifth-most-commonly used app, after text messaging, email, Facebook, and Facebook Messenger.

But for 18- to 24-year-olds, the phone app lost out to a more modern competitor: Snapchat. If they had to choose only one app to keep on their phone, 35% of respondents would choose text, 17% would choose Snapchat, and only 14% would choose the phone. Nine percent chose Pokémon Go.

This might be because of a cultural shift in how young people view talking on the phone.

According to a 2013 Wall Street Journal article, millennials see the phone as "an interruption"— picking up the phone "without emailing first can make it seem as though you're prioritizing your needs over theirs."

This could be in part because many millennials, especially on the older end of the generation, grew up with AOL and instant messaging, which spawned a natural inclination toward texting and other messaging apps. Young millennials might not have even grown up with a landline in their home.

While a preference for texting over calling has seeped into the older generations — baby boomers still prefer calling to text, but just barely — most apps beyond standard messaging apps are still a younger person's game. In the 24 hours before the survey, only 5% of 55- to 64-year-olds had used Snapchat and only 1% would choose the app over texting and calling.

SEE ALSO: Millennials aren't building startups like past generations, but not for the reason you think

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Snapchat filters were the real winners of the first Trump-Clinton debate

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Snaphat Filter Debate

Americans across the country were glued to the first presidential debate in one of the most controversial presidential elections to date. And with nearly half of voters relying on these debates to decide who they are going to vote for in November, there was even more pressure

But for some, perhaps out of frustration or maybe boredom, Snapchat filters provided the entertainment they needed to get through the 90-minute debate. 

For those with active Snapchat accounts like me, you might have seen your friends using the social network as a way to post about the debates.

Take a look at some of the funniest and most creative Snapchat filters applied to Monday night's first presidential debate between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.

SEE ALSO: Millennials would rather delete their phone app than delete Snapchat

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