Path has a new, attractive, and intuitive interface for sharing moments and viewing what your close friends are posting.
The year-old semi-social network app Path is getting a major update that adds scary but interesting automatic
life-tracking features, as well the capability--finally--to share Path items with larger social networks.
A refresher: Path was designed as a mobile service that lets you share what's important in your life with only your closest friends. It's not a wide-open social network like Facebook, nor a broadcast platform like Twitter. It's designed to keep you in touch with your family and your close, intimate friends only.
Path now makes that even easier and, in my opinion, more enjoyable.
The new user interface on Path is extremely engaging. Now every sharing
activity hides under a single button. And Instead of being good at just
sharing photos and videos, now Path is equally adept at sharing
thoughts, places you're visiting, and when you're asleep or awake. (It
also lets you share music, but it's less good at that, since it can only
tell what you're playing in the phone's music player, not on Spotify or
other services.)
The fascinating, scary, and fortunately optional new feature of
Path is called "Automatic." The app knows where you are and can
automatically update your Path stream with significant location changes,
once it learns your routine. If you hang out in a new neighborhood, or
you're driving and stop in a city you've never been to, Path will create
a location update. When it spots you at a new airport, ditto.
You can also tell Path when you go to sleep and when you wake up, and it
will create an update with that data, and additional clever
story-telling. Sleep for two hours and it might say you, "need coffee."
Snooze for ten and it could say, "Ready to attack the day!" Path has a
novelist on staff, I'm told, to keep these little items fresh.
Path CEO Dave Morin told me that tweaking the algorithms that
figure out when to update, and which update "story" to use, are under
constant development. Siri, he says, is paving the way for mobile apps
with personality and smarts. "AI is the new UI," he says.
Posting automatic updates about when you're stopping for grub or
grabbing some shut-eye might seem like trivia or over-sharing, but
Morin maintains that in Path's tight networks of real friends, it's not.
This information is not irrelevant when it comes from your best buddy
or your spouse.
But it certainly is TMI when it comes to sharing with friends of
friends, or those long-lost Facebook contacts you last saw in grade
school. So while Path will now let you share out the items you post
intentionally to Facebook, Twitter, or Foursquare (Tumblr is coming; but Google+ still has no API), it won't share the Automatic updates.
Morin says that Path 2.0 will post "natively" to these other social
platforms: It'll use link-shorteners for items it puts on Twitter, and
will post natively to Facebook's photos, for example. So you could,
theoretically, use Path for sharing everything, from your intimate
updates to Path friends to your broadcasts out to the Twitterverse.
Path 2.0 is due out today on iOS and
Android.
Source is
http://news.cnet.com/8301-19882_3-57333449-250/new-path-2.0-automatically-chronicles-shares-your-life/
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