A new app for Google Glass allows you to take a picture with only your eye, according to the Associate Press.

The new app called “Winky”, created by developer Mike DiGiovanni, gives the wearer the opportunity to snap a picture while holding one eye closed. The new app is one of the first few apps to appear for Google’s new eyewear.

DiGiovanni commented on the app through his Google+ page:

Winking lets you lifelog with little to no effort. I've taken more pictures today than I have the past 5 days thanks to this. "Sure, they are mostly silly, but my timeline has now truly become a timeline of where I've been.

Many people will have to wait to use the app since Google Glass won’t be released to the masses until at least 2014.

For those worried about hundreds of people walking around and aggressively winking, Marcus Wohlsen of Wired says there is no reason to panic.

"Google Glass fails to acknowledge that walking around with a camera mounted on the side of your face at all times makes you look dorky," he writes. "Think of the Bluetooth headset: it’s a really sensible way to use your phone without having to take it out of your pocket – so sensible that there’s really no reason not to keep that headset in your ear most of the time. But you don’t, do you?"

It will be a while before people all across America will have a Google Glass eye set the way many have Google-powered smartphones. In a previous interview with BBC News, Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt said it will also take a while for people to learn how to use the new device in public.

"The fact of the matter is we'll have to develop some new social etiquette. It's obviously not appropriate to wear these glasses in situations where recording is not correct, and indeed you have this problem already with phones," Schmidt said. "Companies like Google have a very important responsibility to keep your information safe. You have responsibility as well to understand what you are doing and how you are doing it and obey appropriately and also keep everything up to date."