This Week On The TC Europe Podcast: Raspberry Pi, Wayra, France And Esperanto

TechCrunch Europe Podcast

We’ve made it to episode 10! This week, we talk about Raspberry Pi racking up worldwide sales of 1.75 million, Partech Ventures investing $215 million in European startups the American way, and Wayra sharing numbers about its accelerators for the first time. This is the TechCrunch Europe Podcast, wherein we European writers discuss tech news, as well as what’s happening in our startup scene.

This episode was a great opportunity to talk about how venture capital is doing in Europe. Is there enough money allocated to young and energetic startups? We answer this question and talk about more pressing issues, such as how much tea is sold in the U.K., why French people are so negative about everything, and more.

Join Steve O’Hear, Natasha Lomas, Ingrid Lunden, Darrell Etherington, John Biggs, and Romain Dillet to hear what we think about those topics.

We invite you to enjoy our weekly podcast every Thursday.

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Intro music by Espanto.

Punchh, The Virtual Stamp Card That Connects A Restaurant’s Cash Register To A Customer’s Smart Phone

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Punchh is a CRM platform for the brick-and-mortar business world that takes the old punch card that you get at a coffee shop or restaurant and makes it an app that a restaurant can hook into its point of sale (POS) system.

Today, the company has launched a new customer segmentation tool that allows a restaurant to explore customer sales information down to a granular level. This allows a restaurant owner to segment customers that like tequila, for instance, and send them a discount on their next margarita. With the new service, customers get a dashboard view of their customers that they can use as a foundation to build their campaigns.

The small business needs better CRM capabilities but it has been a difficult task to use digital marketing technologies effectively. Until recently, people went online in their homes. Today, they stand in line for a cup of coffee, a computer in their hands, plugged into the Internet. That opens a new world of marketing but the question still becomes one about actually engaging customers with the service.

Punchh is a three-year-old company that started as a punch card service. It is now targeting verticles, starting with the restaurant business. It provides restaurants with a virtual stamp card that integrates with POS systems so customers can scan their receipts and get the card stamped. With each stamp, customers may get a reward. In turn, the owner can ask the customer for a review that will be posted to a social network.  Punchh builds private label apps that engage customers with games, campaigns and surveys that are tied to a loyalty program. Here’s a screenshot from a demo the company did last week with me.

Getting restaurants signed up is a problem for a service like Punchh. I downloaded the app and was provided with a list of local restaurants, including one that is now closed. None are part of the Punchh service.  Instead, I was asked to tell the business to sign up for the Punchh service.

In a follow up email, a spokesperson said Punchh is targeting restaurant chains more than locally owned businesses.

I do believe that mobile and ubiquitous connectivity means that there will be more services for brick and mortar businesses that make sense for them to use. Punchh’s challenge is getting small businesses to use the service so customers see a rich resource as opposed to a list of restaurants that the customer has to request be a part of what Punchh offers.

Tony Espinoza Steps Down As CEO Of Couchsurfing, Jennifer Billock Steps Up As Interim As Startup Lays Off Staff, “Doubles Down” On Mobile

couchsurfing ceo

Big changes at Couchsurfing, the social travel site that lets people connect and crash on their sofas and spare beds when visiting each other’s towns. Today, CEO Tony Espinoza announced that he is stepping down as the company lays off staff and refocuses on mobile. In the interim, Jen Billock, who currently is listed as director of member experience at Couchsurfing on her LinkedIn profile, will become the interim CEO as the company embarks on the search for a permanent replacement.

“The past 18 months serving as CEO have yielded some of the most meaningful and powerful experiences of my 20 year career building technology. Today as I step down as CEO I’m proud that Couchsurfing is poised for the future with a great team, substantial funding, strong investor backing, and a passionate, growing community,” Espinoza writes in an email. The full text is below.

The startup, backed by General Catalyst, Benchmark, Menlo Ventures, Point Nine and Omidyar Network, is now going to focus on mobile — and we have heard that this is where all new hires will happen. The company up to now had raised some $22.6 million, with the last $15 million in August 2012.

As for the layoffs, it’s unclear still just how many there have been. A spokesperson tells us that the full number is about 40% of staff, with now no more than 20 people working at the company.

Earlier, a tipster had told us the proportion was 50% of staff. Another blogging about her layoff just calls it “a bunch.” We’ve reached out to Espinoza and Couchsurfing to confirm the numbers. A little more unconfirmed detail: part of the layoffs, apparently, have resulted in deep cuts to its engineering team, with the entire engineering team let go “except for a 3 person skeleton support crew,” according to a tipster.

Our tipster — again, this is unconfirmed — says that the reason for the layoffs and other changes is because the company has seen an $800,000 monthly burn rate. But we understand the company has a long cash runway at the moment to figure out ways to turn that around (staff cuts help, too).

We have the two internal emails sent to staff below about the management changes announced today, although the layoffs really started to take hold last week as we understand it.

These are not the first problems at the company, which had faced some pretty arch user complaints and privacy investigations.

More to come.

Tony Espinoza wrote:
Dear Couchsurfing –

Couchsurfing began as a global movement, and I am honored to have been part of its transformation into a mission-driven startup with a deep sense of purpose. The past 18 months serving as CEO have yielded some of the most meaningful and powerful experiences of my 20 year career building technology. Today as I step down as CEO I’m proud that Couchsurfing is poised for the future with a great team, substantial funding, strong investor backing, and a passionate, growing community.

I remain in awe of the CS community which has grown in every dimension, doubling in size to 7M members just since I joined the company. Along the way we raised significant financial support from investors who are aligned with the CS mission to make the world better through travel and travel richer through connection.

Late last year, I realized Couchsurfing’s rapid organic growth required that we crystalize and strengthen our core values — the foundation for everything we do. It was at this time that I reached out to long-time colleague, Jen Billock, whose proven track record as a compassionate startup leader made her the perfect candidate to focus on our community and transform the way we work from the inside out. She immediately championed the voice of the community and led key initiatives such as the new Ambassador program and an integrated approach to all communication channels, building the scaffolding for Couchsurfing’s evolving brand and member experience.

The board of directors and I are pleased to announce Jen’s appointment as interim CEO. The board will soon commence a search for a long-term CEO, and Jen has graciously accepted our request for her to step in at this important moment. We have a great deal of faith in her ability to lead the company through the next phase. I look forward to continuing to partner with her in the coming months as we double down on mobile and continue driving Couchsurfing’s mission.

Please join me in welcoming Jen to her new role!

And Jen Billock’s first email:

From: Jen Billock
Subject: Re: The Next Chapter

Thank you, Tony. I’m deeply grateful to have spent the past 11 months working so closely with you, and look forward to our continued work together.

And to the rest of the Couchsurfing team…

I came here to Couchsurfing to work with Tony. It’s not every day that one gets to work for a trusted friend and mentor. I am grateful to Tony for that fateful text message (I leapt at the opportunity via text before even speaking to him) because I landed a job that I knew I would LOVE, and it’s changed my life for the better in countless ways. I’m most grateful for being given the opportunity to work with such a talented team in service of Couchsurfing’s inspiring and passionate community. Working with a stellar team is what gets me up in the morning. And to be able to do that for Couchsurfing and its community has been both amazing and humbling. There is nothing in the world that I value more than the power of human connection, and, like a good tech start-up junkie, I believe in the power of technology to facilitate that and to make the world a more open place. Couchsurfing does that in profound ways. I have the pleasure of seeing it every day. Under Tony’s leadership, the global CS community has doubled, which has been incredible to watch.

I’m honored to be offered this opportunity, and to shepherd Couchsurfing, along with all of you, as the board conducts a search for a long-term CEO. Thanks for being here with me. I look forward to spending time with you all in the next few days as we continue to build momentum. My door is always open, and I’m always happy to talk, day or night.

Jen

[Photos: Flickr/Kmeron for LeWeb, LinkedIn]

Microsoft Updates Its Outlook.com Android App With Better Syncing, Storage, Colors And More

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Today Microsoft announced an update to its Android Outlook.com application, including server-side search, improved offline mail storage, colors, vacation replies, and aliases.

Outlook.com, a key project for Microsoft, has over 400 million users. The successor to Hotmail, Outlook.com is Microsoft’s mail vision for all mobile platforms. According to Microsoft, 68% of Outlook.com users hit up their digital missives from their mobile device, so having a strong application set matters.

If you are an Outlook,com and Android user, this update will contain at least a few things that you like. You can now sync all your mail to your device, if you want to burn the storage capacity. If you want to be able to find any message you want, but not download the lot, Microsoft has added server-side search to the Android app. A different question: How did it not have that feature before?

Microsoft has also added a new color set to the app, and introduced support for aliases, along with vacation replies. Taken altogether, the Android now appears to be a fully functional mail experience. I can’t imagine what using it previously was like. Before, over more than 10,000 ratings, Microsoft accrued a rating on the Play store of under three stars.

You can download the app here. If you think that the addition of color is a minor update, by the way, you are picking an argument with Yahoo, who recently rolled out color changes to its Mail experience. Apparently it matters.

Final note: The top three webmail experiences continue to nibble around the edges. When is someone going to reinvent this damn plague we call email?

Top Image Credit: Flickr

Next IT Launches Alme For Healthcare, A Virtual Assistant For Chronic Disease Management

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Next IT has been working on building natural language processing and artificial intelligence based virtual assistant systems for enterprise customers for years. Its tools are currently being used by major airlines and insurance companies to provide answers to their customers with voice and text-driven virtual assistants that can answer their questions. Today, after almost 12 years of working on these problems, it’s expanding into healthcare.

Alme for Healthcare is a virtual assistant for patients that focuses on disease management and can respond to common patient and customer requests using both text and voice prompts. Using this tool, health-care providers will be able to create personalized health assistants for their patients that will help them ensure these patients stick to a treatment plan and regularly report their status. The tool is currently targeted at pharmaceutical companies, healthcare providers, government organizations and accountable care organizations. Next IT hopes that they will then make its tools available to consumers.

As Next IT founder and CEO Fred Brown told me earlier this month, the team decided that it had to go back to the drawing board to brings its services into the healthcare world. Given the vagaries of speech recognition and the potential dangers of giving patients wrong advice, the team added a number of options for users to talk to a real person when necessary. Also, if the technology notices that somebody could be in danger of a relapse or other serious medical issue, it can direct the user to talk to an expert directly.

Unlike other systems the company has previously built, Alme for Healthcare also offers institutions that use it more for personalization options. Doctors can, for example, create disease-management plans for individual users. These, Brown noted, tend to be well-structured and lend themselves to the kind of virtual assistant systems the company offers because they work within well-defined parameters.

It’s worth noting that the platform itself consists of three pieces: a comprehensive patient ontology that forms the foundation of the system, support for goal-based conversations that help patients stick to their treatment plans, and interactive concept illustrations that can show a patient where to do an at-home injection, for example.

Brown showed me a demo, for example, that quizzed a user about how well he was managing his diabetes. What’s impressive about Next IT’s systems is how well its natural language processing algorithms – which were all developed in-house – recognize even casual voice responses (though users can also type responses and on phones and tablets, the system can ask show multiple choice prompts).

As Brown also noted, the fact that the system can regularly prompt patients to self-report how they feel or to enter certain diagnostic information, doctors will now have far more information about them when they do eventually have to come to their office in person. Traditionally, a doctor focusing on MS, for example, will ask virtually the same questions about a patient’s status every time he or she comes in. Now, they will have this info already and can use their time with the patient more efficiently.

Given the privacy implications of gathering this data, the Next IT team tells me that it went to great lengths to ensure that all the data that passes through its systems remains safe. Its customers can also install the system on their own servers and networks, which are mostly likely already compliant with HIPAA and other regulations.

The system is now out of beta and the company has already lined up a number of large partners. Sadly, though, Brown wasn’t ready to announce any of them yet.

PeeqPeeq, The App That Lets You “Shop Your Email” Expands, As Company’s Next Take On Reimagining The Inbox Starts Testing

peeqpeeq email

PeeqPeeq, a mobile and tablet application that lets users “shop their email,” is launching its first major update today, after initially debuting its email-based catalog on iTunes just last month. The update expands the app’s reach beyond Gmail, to now include all of the Microsoft email domains, like Hotmail, Live and Outlook, while also offering a revamped look and feel for iOS 7 as well as badges support, so you’ll know when new deals have come in.

The app has arrived at an interesting time for email marketers, who have reportedly been experiencing a downturn in email open rates following the introduction of “tabs” in Gmail, the widely adopted free webmail service Google provides. In the new tabbed Gmail inbox, emails from retailers and other merchants are shuffled off into another section labelled “Promotions,” which end users can browse through at their leisure. No longer can email marketers rely on timing the arrivals of their emails to hit inboxes in the early AM, hoping to grab eyeballs when consumers open up their email first thing in the morning. These days, who knows when users are browsing through their email deals? And from early reports it seems that fewer users are clicking through at all.

PeeqPeeq is taking advantage of this change in consumer behavior with an app that takes the concept of browsing through promotions on your own time, but packaging it in a way that makes the task more enjoyable. Its app digs into your email inbox, and surfaces all the promotional shopping messages – the emails from the various department stores, airlines, e-commerce shops, etc. you’ve likely (or inadvertently) signed up for – and organizes them into a mobile catalog you can browse from your smartphone or iPad when you’re ready to really shop. The experience is more akin to using Flipboard than it is email triage.

These promotional mailings are the messages that you think of as junk when they interrupt your train of thought and workday correspondence, currently. It’s sales at Macy’s, new shoes from Zappos, electronics from NewEgg, Groupon deals, dresses from online retailers, and so on. But in the PeeqPeeq app, you can see these deals at a glance, organized six per page, and filterable by type (e.g. women, men, kids, travel, home & kitchen, etc.) You can also bookmark those you like, and share them with others.

To make this all happen, PeeqPeeq moves messages out of your inbox into a dedicated folder in your main inbox. But the app isn’t limited to only those emails you personally subscribe to. On its backend, the company has opted into all the promotional newsletters you could ever want, allowing you to browse through categories where you may only occasionally have an interest.

With today’s update, users can finally import deals from other inboxes, including Microsoft’s mail service – which, let’s face it, is often used as the dumping ground for all those emails you don’t want cluttering up your main Gmail inbox. It will also let you know when new deals have arrived with iOS’s red badges, though not with buzzy push notifications.

Company Now Attacking The Next Email Problem After Promotions

While PeeqPeeq will have some appeal to those who do a lot of online shopping, the company’s vision is broader than just this one email category. In fact, explains CEO Lee Ott, his company RokketLaunch is actually rethinking email not by “killing it,” as some companies have tried and failed to do, but in leveraging its data for new products.

Reinventing email is a challenge few startups are willing to take on for a number of reasons, but one of the toughest hurdles to overcome is getting email users to change years of ingrained behavior. That’s why it’s impressive when startups like Mailbox, whose gesture-based mobile email app was sold to Dropbox for $100 million, actually generated enough traction to become notable. Getting people out of their preferred inbox is very hard to do.

“If this is the state of the art, this sucks” says Ott, referring to the way most email is handled today, “But I can’t kill it. [Email has] two and a half billion people using it. But maybe I can just change it. Maybe we can use the inertia that it has to do something really different, where it won’t feel like you’re abandoning email. It will just feel like a subtle change. And that subtle change rippled out over time will be a really big change,” he says.

The company already has two other products in the works that are using this “big data” store found in the inbox. One is now in alpha testing, and while Ott won’t offer details on what it is, he would say there are plenty of other areas you could take on in the inbox, including things like electronic bills and receipts, shipping notices, non-promotional newsletters, social messages and updates, and more. The beta should begin to ship in the next couple of months. He’s not sure if people will really get it, but if it works, it could “totally blow up,” he claims. The only hint as to what it might be is this: RokketLaunch is attacking the biggest inbox problems in order, meaning those that occupy the highest percentages of user inboxes.

“Email’s weakness is actually its biggest strength,” explains Ott. “A massive volume of content that’s getting funneled to you – what if the volume is actually the thing that makes it valuable?,” he wonders.

It’s a different way of thinking about the email problem, where so many startups are trying to help you have less mail, by better managing your inbox, speeding up triaging, helping you opt-out of emails, and more. Of course, anything related to email is a huge experiment and risk, which is why startups so often avoid the area entirely.

Ott, whose background involves time spent as head of mobile and other products at Yahoo, as well as head of product for webOS at HP, has raised $1.25 million from his own network of connections, including Jerry Yang’s AME Cloud Ventures, Ash Patel (Morado Ventures), Jon Rubinstein, Farzad Nazem, Hank Vigil (SVP of Strategy and Partnerships at Microsoft), Adrian Aoun (Wavii, sold to Google), and others. The investors, to be clear, were funding not just PeeqPeeq, but the company’s larger goal of shifting inbox behaviors to new experiences.

The updated PeeqPeeq app is live now here in iTunes. As for the rest, stay tuned.

The Pagemaster

The Pagemaster

The new Paperwhite isn’t a huge leap forward compared to Amazon’s first model. But unlike the smartphone world, where marginal updates are supplemented with features no one will actually use, the Paperwhite’s incremental updates are actually useful.

    



Airbnb’s Brian Chesky And Sequoia’s Alfred Lin On The Importance Of Culture And Core Values To A Business

Airbnb co-founder Brian Chesky and Sequoia Capital partner, Airbnb board member, and former Zappos COO Alfred Lin joined us in the TechCrunch TV studio for a special three-part series on how Chesky and Lin work together on retaining culture, expanding internationally, and maintaining customer service. In this episode, we focus on how Lin and Chesky first met, and what Chesky has learned from the Zappos model in creating a culture at Airbnb.

Founded by Chesky, Joe Gebbia and Nathan Blecharczyk, Y Combinator-incubated Airbnb was founded in 2008 as a marketplace to find a sofa to crash on or a room to rent for a short time. In fact, Sequoia led Airbnb’s seed round back in 2009.

Flash forward five years, and the company has evolved into an international giant in the apartment and home rentals space, reportedly valued at $2.5 billion during its last funding round. To date, Airbnb has helped service over 8.5 million guests, and has more than 500,000 listings in 33,000 cities and 192 countries.

As he explains in the video above, Chesky was obsessed with Airbnb’s culture from the beginning. Shortly after the startup raised funding in 2009 from Sequoia, the founders flew to Zappos to understand how they could apply some of the learnings from the e-commerce company to Airbnb’s own internal operations. One of the things that Lin helped Chesky and the team develop were the core values of Airbnb, and how to extend the culture of a business to the recruitment and hiring process.

Check out the video to hear what Airbnb’s six core values are, and stay tuned for the second video in this series, which addresses the company’s international expansion, how Chesky is approaching the challenges involved with growing globally (with the help of Lin) and more.

DG Acquires Republic Project, A Google Ventures-Backed Ad Startup, For $1.4M

republic project

Publicly traded ad management and distribution company Digital Generation, better known as DG, is announcing that it has acquired ad startup Republic Project for $1.4 million in cash, with additional earn outs based on revenue and profitability.

The startup launched in 2009 as a way for artists and labels to sell pre-ordered music to fans. Since then, Republic Project has evolved into a broader ad platform that allows customers to create rich media ads that run on multiple platforms and devices, and to update their campaigns in real-time.

Republic Project raised $1 million in funding last year from Google Ventures, 500 Startups, and others.

Last year, DG acquired ad tech company Peer39 for $15.5 million. In the press release announcing the acquisition, DG CMO Ricky Liversidge said this deal will boost his company’s efforts “to integrate and innovate within areas such as social and mobile, while making sure advertisers can move quickly within a data driven landscape.” And Republic Project CEO AJ Vernet said joining DG will allow his team to “fast track our solution globally.”

The companies say the entire 11-person Republic Project team will be joining DG’s Los Angeles office.

Those Giant Fox News Touchscreens Are Microsoft Perceptive Pixel Displays Running Windows 8

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Huge iPads or tiny journalists? That’s the question that many are asking after Fox News released a video detailing a new set that includes a number of analysts sat before massive touch interfaces. The screens measure 55 inches, run Windows 8 (soon: Windows 8.1, presumably) and look damned futuristic.

Secret Fox News hardware? Something that Samsung kicked together for the company? Nope, just Microsoft’s PPI display technology deployed in the wild, the company confirmed with TechCrunch. Microsoft’s PPI business comes from its acquisition of Perceptive Pixel in July 2012. Microsoft, through that acquisition, is now an OEM of some of the largest touchscreens in the world; PPI displays also come in an 80-inch variant.

For fun, here’s a shot of long-time Microsoft denizen Craig Mundie poking a PPI display at TechForum on Microsoft’s campus this March:

And here we have Shep Smith’s crew using their own PPIs:

According to Smith, Fox News can toss the images of any of the displays on air when they wish. The skinning you see above (from black to white) appears to be in place to let the displays match the color scheme of the new studio.

Aside from it being simply neat of Fox News to use the displays, it’s a nice moment for Microsoft: The company has found an early commercial use for the technology. Inside of Microsoft you can better tell the pecking order by who has a PPI display in their office, compared to a whiteboard, if you were curious.

I spoke with Microsoft’s Eric Rudder in March, who told me that the multitouch slate screens cost around $7,000 for the 55-inch model. Once that goes through a few product cycles, PPI displays could become affordable enough for the rest of us. For now, I’m jealous of Fox News for the first time in a long time.

Top Image Credit: Screenshot via Seth Fiegerman

Forkly, The Foodspotting Competitor From Brightkite Founders, Is Looking For A New Home

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Forkly, a Foodspotting competitor launched back 2010, is shutting down. Well, sort of – it will remain open for six to eight months, and maybe more, while looking for a new home, we’re told. It looked like bad news for the company when one of its co-founders, Martin May, left the startup to join as CTO at Push.io, and now we’ve confirmed why: Forkly is “in transition.” The company, for those unfamiliar, was notable mainly for its creators: Brightkite founders May and Brady Becker. With Brightkite, the team was well ahead of the check-in trend that later led to companies like Foursquare, with the launch of one of the first apps to combine social, mobile and local to form a new kind of network.

But Forkly was not quite as groundbreaking. Its emphasis was more on rating individual food items and dishes in order to discover what’s good where, not just sharing pictures of your meal. The idea was to help users build their own “taste graph,” meaning a personalized profile of what you like to eat. In February, the company launched a revamped app they called “Forkly 2.0,” which was designed to make that taste graph more useful through personalized recommendations.

Unfortunately, Forkly wasn’t very differentiated from Foodspotting – at least in the eyes of consumers. In addition, it and other food-focused social networks and review platforms have also had to contend with the rise of other companies, like Yelp for reviews, Instagram, where users like to post their meal photos, and, ironically Foursquare, which also lets you find what’s good to eat nearby.

Forkly took in $200,000 in seed funding back in May 2011, followed by $700,000 in March 2012, according to its AngelList profile, which hasn’t posted an update for seven months, as of the time of writing. Investors included Jeff Miller (founder of Punchfork), David Cohen, Jim Deters (CEO at Galvanize), and others.

The profile also notes that the app had roughly 300,000 users on iOS, and an Android version was due out in March 2013. However, that Android app never launched – the site still lists the app as “coming soon.” Meanwhile, the iOS app has not been updated since this July. Meanwhile, May left for Push.io in September, according to his LinkedIn profile.

The company currently has 2.1 million dishes, 360,000 downloads, 500,000 dish ratings, and 93,000 restaurants with ratings.

Though the Forkly app is still live in the iTunes App Store, it’s ranked #320 in the “Food & Drink” section, according to the latest figures from App Annie – a metric that indicates the app failed to gain significant traction in its niche, or perhaps ran out of money to continue its user acquisition efforts.

According to TechCrunch sources, Forkly is indeed in the process of winding down operations, but it hasn’t been fully closed down yet. A more formal announcement has yet to be made. That’s why the app is still available for download on the App Store.

We reached out to May and Becker about several hours ago, and while both responded quickly with an offer to comment, we didn’t yet hear back by the time of publication. We’ll update the post with additional details or those comments when provided.

Update: According to Becker, management of Forkly is being taken over by investor Steve Croake, while both founders are moving on. The company is now shopping itself around to other larger firms, where it could be a good fit. He says some discussions are underway now.

“The technology is really awesome, we have a great community and great data, but it’s not really being monetized at the moment,” says Becker of Forkly. “Martin and I have other opportunities in front of us. We’ve been working on this for two and a half, almost three years. It’s time for us to move on,” he explains.

Becker is remaining for now to help during the transition along with a couple of others. He’s also working on some side projects including a new travel site called Inside.co with TechStars Boulder’s community manager and blogger Andrew Hyde, for example. He also has a project underway at DramApothecary.com.

Google Glass Gets Transit Directions So You Can Get Your $1,500 Head Computer Stolen On The Bus

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Today, Google Glass gets transit directions via the new XE10 update, as long as you’ve paired it with an Android phone. Previously, the head computer would give you directions to nearby locations but only via your feet or personal vehicle.

This latest update adds buses, street cars and more into the mix, letting you specify a location and allowing Glass to pin down the exact routes and timing for you. This utilizes the navigation system of your connected Android phone, meaning that you’re not going to be able to do this with Glass alone, or with it connected to an iOS device. Currently only the MyGlass app on Android can pass along the location information needed to get these directions. 

The Glass team explains how you use the new transit directions: “From the Home screen, get directions by saying “ok glass, get directions to…” Glass will pull up directions by whatever method you used last. To switch the manner of transportation, tap the directions card and swipe until you see Transit.”

This all sounds great and lovely, but my worry is that Glass isn’t exactly ubiquitous enough — even in San Francisco, home of all things new and gadgety — to feel comfortable trucking along on most public transportation while wearing it. I’ve worn it out and about both in suburban and urban areas and felt very uncomfortable riding trains or buses with it on. The devices are still $1,500 and there is a certain theft risk here. And no, I’m not suggesting that people on the bus are more likely to steal your stuff, just that there’s more opportunity there than when driving in your car.

Not that this is a reason for the Glass team to stop adding features though, and they continue to do so at the ‘one update a month’ clip promised at Google I/O.

This update also brings two more additional features including the ability to tap on a card to visit links sent to you in tweets, texts, emails and other messages. You can now also see a profile picture of the person you’re talking to while sending a message. The text is overlaid on top of it.

Still not to be found? The full GDK (Glass Developer Kit) that will allow people to build official ‘native’ Glass apps, instead of the current crop of what are basically web-based apps.

Updated with note about public transport naturally being a bigger theft risk than driving.