Smart glasses audio only works when the content surface respects the form factor: simple navigation, glanceable UI, hands-free sound. WhisprStream includes a companion experience for Meta Ray-Ban Display aimed at listen-only browsing of public stations.
Glasses are terrible for long reading and excellent for continuous sound. Threads, newsletters, and essays that already work as stations become more useful when your phone stays in your pocket.
What the glasses surface is for
The /glasses experience is a public, logged-out, listen-only UI: browse stations, open a player, stream AI-narrated tracks without the full desktop chrome. It reuses the same public playlist and audio endpoints as the main site — a thin, focused client rather than a second product universe.
Open it at whisprstream.com/glasses on a supported device or browser when testing.
Why AI stations fit wearable audio
This is the same reason people like podcasts on walks — with the open web as the catalog instead of studio-only shows. Learn the product shape in what is an AI audio station.
How to use it well
- Prefer public stations with a healthy track count
- Use simple navigation: browse → select station → play / skip
- Keep sessions intentional (news, learning, long-form) rather than infinite social noise
- Build your own station on the main site if the public catalog is not your taste
Creation, billing, and advanced management stay on the full web app. Glasses are for listening.
Related setup on the main product
Before you care about hardware, make sure the medium clicks in a normal browser: browse free stations, then optionally create a station from X + RSS + articles. Hardware only amplifies a habit that already works.
For car and headphone contexts without glasses, the podcast feed path is usually the better distribution layer. For on-site visitors, use an embed.