Call me for free with Tringme!

Source: goebel.net

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Much has been said about startups like Ribbit, Tringme or Flashphone which use the Flash browser plugin for click to call widgets. Aswath Rao even declares 2008 the Year of Flash based VoIP Clients. I can only say that you don’t have to wait till next year to call me for free using Flash. I love my Tringme call widget:

These calls are entirely free to you, because the caller speaks into the Flash widget on my website using a headset or the laptop’s built in phone and speaker. On Linux the sound is a little bit weird. The automatic voice, which says "please wait while we connect your call" before every connection, sounds like a 45 rpm record played on 33. The phone call itself sounds like Mickey Mouse, but still the the words are understandable. On Windows everything works just perfect.

Also to me these calls are entirely free. Other than my widgets from Sitfono and Voxalot where I have to pay to call the person who wants to contact me.

I achieve this by using FWD as SIP provider to power the Tringme widget. The Tringme account website says "Connect my phone and voicemail widget to Phone number or extension". Unfortunately it accepts only numbers and no SIP addresses in this input mask, but as a workaround I have simply put my FWD number there. In the "TringPhone SIP Settings" part of the account configuration I left my FWD login data. Which means that every Tringme call is in fact a free FWD on net call. You can probably do the same with Gizmo Project’s SIP account data and phone numbers, as well as with many other VoIP providers.

Also there is another widget for people who don’t want to talk to me, but just leave a voicemail.

Only seconds later I get a call and a voice says "You have a Tringme" before it plays the message. The Tringme widgets are much better than Gizmocall which also allows free calls from a website.

You could call me for free by simply typing http://www.gizmocall.com/mgoebel in your browser’s address bar. This website also uses Flash, but additionally you have to install a plugin for Windows or Mac. For ten months yet Gizmo owes us a Linux plugin. Although the company’s CEO, Michael Robertson, even has his own Linux distribution, Linspire.

But why bother? The Flash browser plugin gets more and more versatile and works on all platforms. It’s a new way to disrupt the telco industry, circumventing the PSTN and offering a new option for free phone calls that so many people appreciate.

So, if you want, please give me a Tringme call!

And, before you ask: No, I couldn’t get Truphone’s Facebook application running, which should basically do the same like Tringme, only that it uses Java. After one week of tinkering I gave up. But congratulations for winning the "Red Herring 100 Global" Award.

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Last 20 posts tagged "Web_2.0"

Bhaskar Roy: Qik should be a part of Nokia’s Ovi

Source: goebel.net

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Qik is one of the greatest mobile internet applications I know. You just start the software on a Nokia …

Published on February 29th, 2008 under , , , , , ,

I am looking for interviews about VoIP security for a big German magazine

Source: goebel.net

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Dear readers,
I need your help: Until Januar 25, 2008, I have to deliver an article about VoIP security …

Published on January 15th, 2008 under , , ,

Ribbit leapfrogs into Web 2.0

Source: www.theregister.co.uk

Silicon Valley start-up Ribbit has announced another $10m in funding, and the opening of a beta developers program for developers wanting to create telephony applications using Flash technology, …

Published on December 18th, 2007 under , , ,

Call me for free with Tringme!

Source: goebel.net

If you’re new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

Much has been said about startups like Ribbit, Tringme or Flashphone which use the Flash browser plugin …

Voxalot’s Facebook application for really free phone calls

Source: goebel.net

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You know that I bashed Facebook very hard for being a terrible time sucker. Many Web 2.0 applications …

Published on November 19th, 2007 under , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Web 2.0 & The California Fire Crisis

Source: gigaom.com

I was in San Diego this week, and the wildfires there were extraordinary. Hundreds of thousands of people — normal, suburban, it-can’t-happen-to-me people — were displaced, stuck on roadways …

Published on October 23rd, 2007 under ,

Sipgate opens API for VoIP mashups

Source: goebel.net

The VoIP company Sipgate, one of the biggest in Germany with also significant business in the UK, offers a special service for developers. "Sipgate API" is a new interface to integrate …

Published on September 10th, 2007 under , , , , ,

First Blog post

Source: goebel.net

Hello folks,today I start my tech blog. I know I am not the first. But I realized in the last days that I have opinions to many devices that are not well reflected in the other media. I read …

Published on February 1st, 2007 under , , , , ,

New Skype for Mac and Other Web 2.0 Tales

Source: gigaom.com

Its a rather rainy Thursday in San Francisco. I am busy finishing up a story rewrite, so perhaps won’t get to the big stuff (BellSouth comments, cable ala carte debacle and e911) stuff till …

Published on December 1st, 2005 under , ,

VoIP 2.0 meets The Web 2.0

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

Alec Saunders has some cool aggregation going on here with this post.

He’s pulled together some very good thoughts on the future of the Web and VoIP. …

Published on October 2nd, 2005 under , ,

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