![]() Have a list of movies opening in theatres and their Rotten Tomatoes scores pushed to your phone every week. Sign up for notifications from your favorite sites, instead of emails. Get a notification on your phone when a torrent finishes downloading. Here’s some examples of why this is cool (these don’t exist using Pushbullet yet but should!): The possibilities are endless! Pushbullet’s API makes it easy to push things to a user’s Android devices. You can help this process by using the API and letting me know about any issues or feedback you have. The API is brand new and is in preview right now, meaning it could change if something comes up that I haven’t thought of and it might have some bugs. You can find your API key on your Account Settings page.Īlready written or going to write a project using Pushbullet’s API? Every Pushbullet user now has an API key that can be used to enable libraries like these to push to their devices without having to turn over their Google accoung information. ![]() ![]() The new API addresses this problem directly. The downside of Pushbullet not having an API when these projects were written, however, is that they have all had to require a user’s Google account and password in order to work. This is awesome and I’ve been impressed that the authors have overcome the lack of a proper API. ![]() The docs need some work but Pushbullet officially has an API that makes it easy to write software that can push to devices through Pushbullet.Įven though Pushbullet has only been out for a month, people have already written software libraries using it to enable them to push to devices. ![]()
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