Today Particls, billed by many as an RSS feed manipulator/organizer, came out of invitation-only testing with a host of tools for users. Particls essentially serves as a proportioning alert filter that notifies the user via news ticker, pop-up alerts and mobile SMS messaging prioritized according to user needs. The service has many refined consumer side tools, but there is a publisher/developer aspect that adds another dimension to what CEO Chris Saad terms "an attention management engine."
Particls was launched in January of 2006 by Chris Saad, Co-Founder and CEO of Faraday Media, and Co-Founder Ashley Angell. The company has been in private alpha with over 2000 testers and now public beta promises to further refine Particls.
Perhaps it is best to describe what Particles is not, in order to paint an accurate picture of the development. The service is decidedly not a newsreader, but it is an advanced alerts platform. The information service operates in the background and is secondary to a user's primary tasks - but it still allows for instant access to critical information.
Particls is not a widget or gadget engine, because the output adapters are each designed to consume varying levels of user attention. The service basically ranks incoming information by personal relevance to the user and reduces unwanted data input.
Particls ticker and basic UI
Basic Functions
Advanced Features
Particls UI, ticker, right click and other advanced features
As you can see, Particles is a rather more intelligent utility than a simple reader or widget. The heart of this innovation's philosophy is defined by the "Policy of Diminishing Attention Consumption", best described graphically below.
Diminishing Attention Consumption
Particls allows developers to maximize utility through SubscriptionHelpers (to let users grab new XMP data from Soft APIs, re-skin the ticker to personal user preferences, write input/output adapters) and via the inTouch programs. Developers have two levels of customized news and alerts systems for their readers/subscribers. These custom embeddable widgets extend a site's reach and branding capabilities while providing second tier users Particls' innovative features.
InTouch Basic allows for simple integration of Particls by simply typing the URL to RSS/Atom Feed or OPML and copying the embed code. The inTouch Partner program provides more advanced integration, customization and flexibility. Particls can be skinned to re-brand the service, alert users to more content from the host site, gain insight into readers' interests and offer revenue sharing to partners. Both versions of inTouch are free services supported by ads, but Particls is also offering a partner version free of ads at a low subscription fee.
Particls is a simple service to use, but it is also a complex and innovative set of rich tools for filtering data. The re-branding capability for developers is of particular importance, as revenue sharing and content distribution will allow for superb growth potential. From a site developer/blogger perspective, Particls seems almost indispensable. Particls is the culmination of Web 2.0 technologies we have seen directed at solving our growing data overload problem. RSS and feeds will never be the same after today in my view, as the bar has been raised substantially by Particls. Potential developers and users can lean more about extending Particls on these wiki pages and in Tangler.